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- <text id=90TT0374>
- <title>
- Feb. 12, 1990: The Peace Dividend:Myth And Reality
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Feb. 12, 1990 Scaling Down Defense
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 22
- The Peace Dividend: Myth and Reality
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Richard Hornik
- </p>
- <p> When Isaiah prophesied that warriors would "beat their
- swords into plowshares and their spears into pruning hooks,"
- he did not add that a peace dividend would follow, at least in
- the sense that Congress is eagerly anticipating. If the
- Pentagon budget were cut in half, defense spending would fall
- to about 3% of the gross national product. At that level,
- military spending would practically cease to have a significant
- impact on the overall economy, and $150 billion a year would
- be freed for other uses.
- </p>
- <p> Some latter-day prophets, pointing to the boom that
- accompanied Ronald Reagan's military buildup, might argue that
- such cuts are not necessarily a good thing. Socialists have
- asserted that capitalism thrives by creating a permanent
- wartime economy. Will the U.S. economy slow down as Rockwell
- shifts from producing the B-1 bomber to making flight-control
- systems for commercial airliners?
- </p>
- <p> But a peace-driven boom or bust is not likely: as
- demobilizations go, the newest one will be relatively puny,
- even if Congress can persuade the Administration to try
- something bolder than the 2.6% cut Defense Secretary Cheney
- proposed last week. In 1945 almost two-fifths (39.1%) of the
- American economy was devoted to winning World War II. Three
- years later, U.S. military spending had dropped to just 3.7%
- of gross national product, leading to a huge infusion of $68
- billion into the postwar economy. The savings that followed the
- Korean War (military spending dropped from 14.4% of GNP in 1953
- to 10.4% in 1958) and the Viet Nam War (from 9.6% in 1968 to
- 4.8% in 1978) also involved a far larger proportion of the U.S.
- economy than anything contemplated for the post-cold war
- period.
- </p>
- <p> In fact, the U.S. has been enjoying a minor peace dividend
- since 1986, when the Reagan buildup topped off at 6.5% of GNP,
- and even that was a relatively modest level by wartime
- standards. This year defense's share of the economy is 5.5%.
- "The military burden, although significant, has been far from
- overwhelming," says Murray Weidenbaum, director of the Center
- for the Study of American Business in St. Louis. "The
- reductions now contemplated would be merely an acceleration of
- that negativesloping trend line."
- </p>
- <p> The easiest part of a slowdown will be converting soldiers
- into workers. An economy that has produced 20 million jobs in
- the past decade could absorb a massive demobilization, even if
- it meant cutting the armed forces in half by eventually
- releasing 1 million service members into the work force.
- Certain firms and regions would certainly feel the hardship of
- a defense slowdown, like the Boston area, with its
- concentration of Pentagon suppliers such as Raytheon,
- manufacturer of the Sidewinder missile; Long Island, with
- Grumman, builder of the soon-to-be killed F-14 fighter; and
- Kings Bay in south Georgia, where ballistic-missile submarines
- are based. But the Government could soften the blow through job
- retraining and other social and tax programs. Overall, American
- productivity might benefit if military contractors competed
- more for civilian customers and less for Government programs
- with built-in profits.
- </p>
- <p> Special-interest groups are already lined up to grab
- whatever savings result from defense cuts. Supply-siders will
- argue for more tax reductions. Others will want to spend more
- on the homeless, education or the war on drugs. States and
- local jurisdictions are bidding for repairs in the country's
- deteriorating infrastructure: roads and bridges, mass transit,
- pollution-abatement facilities. A good case can be made for
- increased foreign aid so that America's global position will
- not shrink along with its military.
- </p>
- <p> The best possible use for any peace dividend is reduction
- of the federal budget deficit. That might begin to restore the
- U.S. economy to the good health it will need to compete with
- Japan, the emerging European dynamo and increasingly vigorous
- Asian countries like Taiwan and South Korea. America's abysmal
- private saving rate (about 6% of GNP, vs. 16% for Japan) is not
- sufficient to provide capital for private-sector investment,
- particularly if Washington continues borrowing half the savings
- to finance the federal deficit. Devoting the bulk of future
- defense savings to erasing the deficit would be fitting, since
- much of the Government's red ink stems from Reagan's sharp
- military buildup.
- </p>
- <p> A reduction of the deficit would have a number of subtle but
- important effects. Roger E. Brinner, chief economist of the
- forecasting firm DRI/McGraw-Hill, projects that the lower
- interest rates that would result from a smaller deficit could
- produce a modest budget surplus by the end of the century, when
- coupled with reduced defense spending. Economists believe that
- lower interest rates would encourage productive domestic
- investment, make U.S. businesses more competitive and thus help
- reduce the trade deficit. Using only half that dreamed-of $150
- billion peace dividend in the year 2000 for deficit reduction
- would still boost the economy while allowing modest increases
- in social and infrastructure spending.
- </p>
- <p> Despite America's fiscal recklessness in the 1980s, the
- sudden end of the cold war has provided the nation at least a
- modest opportunity to improve its economic health without
- raising taxes or cutting already anemic social spending. The
- nation has wasted such opportunities in the past, notably after
- Viet Nam. It could all too easily squander its savings again.
- Washington should provide leadership on this issue, not pliancy
- to every special-interest group. The worst outcome would be for
- the U.S. to beat its swords into more credit cards.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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