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America's Biggest Jobs Program: The Military

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Saturday, 14 August 2010 09:42
Portrait, Robert Reich, 08/16/09. (photo: Perian Flaherty)

Portrait, Robert Reich, 08/16/09. (photo: Perian Flaherty)

 

 

America's biggest - and only major - jobs program is the U.S. military.

ver 1,400,000 Americans are now on active duty; another 833,000 are in the reserves, many full time. Another 1,600,000 Americans work in companies that supply the military with everything from weapons to utensils. (I'm not even including all the foreign contractors employing non-US citizens.)

If we didn't have this giant military jobs program, the U.S. unemployment rate would be over 11.5 percent today instead of 9.5 percent.

And without our military jobs program personal incomes would be dropping faster. The Commerce Department reported Monday the only major metro areas where both net earnings and personal incomes rose last year were San Antonio, Texas, Virginia Beach, Virginia, and Washington, D.C. - because all three have high concentrations of military and federal jobs.

This isn't an argument for more military spending. Just the opposite. Having a giant undercover military jobs program is an insane way to keep Americans employed. It creates jobs we don't need but we keep anyway because there's no honest alternative. We don't have an overt jobs program based on what's really needed.

For example, when Defense Secretary Robert Gates announced Monday his plan to cut spending on military contractors by more than a quarter over three years, congressional leaders balked. Military contractors are major sources of jobs back in members' states and districts. California's Howard P. "Buck" McKeon, the top Republican on the House Armed Services Committee, demanded that the move "not weaken the nation's defense." That's congress-speak for "over my dead body."

Gates simultaneously announced closing the Joint Force Command in Norfolk, Virginia, that employs 6,324 people and relies on 3,300 private contractors. This prompted Virginia Democratic Senator Jim Webb, a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, to warn that the closure "would be a step backward." Translated: "No chance in hell."

Gates can't even end useless weapons programs. That's because they're covert jobs programs that employ thousands.

He wants to stop production of the C-17 cargo jet he says is no longer needed. But it keeps 4,000 people working at Boeing's Long Beach assembly plant and 30,000 others at Boeing suppliers strategically located in 40 states. So despite Gates's protests the Senate has approved ten new orders.

That's still not enough to keep all those C-17 workers employed, so the Pentagon and Boeing have been hunting for foreign purchasers. The Indian Air Force is now negotiating to buy ten, and talks are underway with several other nations, including Oman and Saudi Arabia.

Ever wonder why military equipment is one of America's biggest exports? It's our giant military jobs program in action.

Gates has also been trying to stop production of a duplicate engine for the F-25 joint Strike Fighter jet. He says it isn't needed and doesn't justify the $2.9 billion slated merely to develop it.

But the unnecessary duplicate engine would bring thousands of jobs to Indiana and Ohio. Cunningly, its potential manufacturers Rolls-Royce and General Electric created a media blitz (mostly aimed at Washington, D.C. where lawmakers would see it) featuring an engine worker wearing a "Support Our Troops" T-shirt and arguing the duplicate engine will create 4,000 American jobs. Presto. Despite a veto threat from the White House, a House panel has just approved funding the duplicate.

By the way, Gates isn't trying to cut the overall Pentagon budget. He just wants to trim certain programs to make room for more military spending with a higher priority.

The Pentagon's budget - and its giant undercover jobs program - keeps expanding. The President has asked Congress to hike total defense spending next year 2.2 percent, to $708 billion. That's 6.1 percent higher than peak defense spending during the Bush administration.

This sum doesn't even include Homeland Security, Veterans Affairs, nuclear weapons management, and intelligence. Add these, and next year's national security budget totals about $950 billion.

That's a major chunk of the entire federal budget. But most deficit hawks don't dare cut it. National security is sacrosanct.

Yet what's really sacrosanct is the giant jobs program that's justified by national security. National security is a cover for job security.

This is nuts.

Wouldn't it be better to have a jobs program that created things we really need - like light-rail trains, better school facilities, public parks, water and sewer systems, and non-carbon energy sources - than things we don't, like obsolete weapons systems?

Historically some of America's biggest jobs programs that were critical to the nation's future have been justified by national defense, although they've borne almost no relation to it. The National Defense Education Act of the late 1950s trained a generation of math and science teachers. The National Defense Highway Act created millions of construction jobs turning the nation's two-lane highways into four- and six-lane Interstates.

Maybe this is the way to convince Republicans and blue-dog Democrats to spend more federal dollars putting Americans back, and working on things we genuinely need: Call it the National Defense Full Employment Act.

 

Open Article On Originating Site

Robert Reich is Professor of Public Policy at the University of California at Berkeley. He has served in three national administrations, most recently as secretary of labor under President Bill Clinton. He has written twelve books, including "The Work of Nations," "Locked in the Cabinet," and his most recent book, "Supercapitalism." His "Marketplace" commentaries can be found on publicradio.com and iTunes.

 

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+7 # Guest 2010-08-14 11:18
And, it is estimated that if we greatly reduced or eliminated war expenditures (I won't dignify them by referring to their euphemism, "defense expenditures"), then the first $35K of income could become tax free for all Americans.
 
 
+5 # Guest 2010-08-14 11:35
Thank you, Robert Reich. Anyone surprised? Only the uninformed. War IS good business. We deserve a long, deep depression and/or a revolution to get back to basics.
 
 
+7 # Guest 2010-08-14 12:41
Dear Dr. Reich: I enjoy your insights very much! Thank you! Also, I look forward to viewing Mr. and Mrs. Tillman's appearance on Larry King this coming Monday night. May I refer you, sir, to "Tarnished Brass: Is the U.S. Military Profession in Decline?", by Professor Richard H. Kohn, Univ of N.C. He cites three critical areas challenging current military professionalism 1. intellectual 2. political 3. moral/ethical. It is my hope that the Tillmans will touch on all three areas in their comments. Regarding continuing over the top spending, consider the U S Army Recruiting Command's and USAAC's insistence in spending $7.5 million for NASCAR races trying to entice new Army Recruits, while Army Recruiters are committing suicide regularly. Sure, we can examine the issue, throw studies at it, but what is being done about it - 25 state side Army Recruiters killed themselves since 2001, two more in the last two months. MG Donald M. Campbell, CG and former Deputy CG at USAREC, please fix it now or go!
 
 
+2 # Guest 2010-08-15 17:30
Where would one get information about the army recruiters you describe. Many thanks
 
 
-8 # Guest 2010-08-14 13:40
While it would be nice if Congress would establish a jobs program that does something useful, there is no way the 60 votes in the Senate needed to establish such a program can ever be assembled.

The country needs jobs. If the only kind Congress will approve are through military spending, then we should continue and even expand the military program

It does not matter that the new employees are not producing anything useful. Their paychecks will go right back into the economy to increase consumer demand and stimulate the economy, just like any other job.

Increase the size of the army and reduce the unemployment rate immediately. The Republicans might be dumb enough to buy this plan.
 
 
+2 # Guest 2010-08-16 13:48
Arnold, your reasoning is SICK, people with your view are the reason we have constant war.

Maybe we can also do away with prisons? Many young criminals get a choice: go to jail or go into the military. A lot of these young punks are helping to bring down the moral of the military. They commit crimes in the countries where they are fighting, and make the people there hate us more.
 
 
+4 # Guest 2010-08-14 15:36
War is Americas biggest Business and no matter how many innocent people get killed, they LOVE it!
 
 
+2 # Guest 2010-08-14 15:52
Calling it the Economic Defense Act is better framing.
 
 
0 # Guest 2010-08-14 17:47
It's the F-35 ... not F-25 OR the F-22
 
 
+2 # Guest 2010-08-14 20:57
If we have people building stuff we don't need (weapons, etc.), then let's pay them to NOT build weapons and just pay them--essentially to NOT build them! That step would take the flood of useless weapons out of the market and the workers would, at the same time, get paid. However, this would essentially be a form of welfare as are the funds for our corporations and banks and such, so it would be a step in leveling the playing field just a bit. But try it and stand back for the whining of the Republicans!
 
 
-4 # Guest 2010-08-15 06:38
I do not agree that, "Having a giant undercover military jobs program is an insane way to keep Americans employed."

At a time when the scourge of fascism is rising, what better way to prepare an American who by his or her very nature abhors this kind of thing?

I am not a military man. Never served. This wasn't a part of my wiring. Still, I value those who do so with dignity and honor. All the more these days, too, because (and you should get this, too, Mr. Reich, because you constantly are on the front lines where intellectuals are wont to rationalize arrangements entirely fascist in nature) the common American citizen NEEDS those among his or her own who stand ready to resist (if need be) were any overt move to institutionaliz e fascism attempted over coming years, as everything underpinning our way of life crumbles at the alter of a financial system built by men and woman who generally are at heart fascists.
 
 
0 # soularddave 2010-11-14 19:02
Lots of people are going to college during the economic downturn. they will need jobs related to their chosen fields. In their day, VISTA and Peace Corps provided many a graduate (or not) with helpful study and practical experience. Reintroduce these, along with Americorps, and you've got 1,000s of people working toward a better future.

These 'hobs', thought they might pay less, would suit unemployed defense plant workers to better their communities. There is a pressing need, too, for manufacturing skill in areas of solar & wind power generation.

America MUST move forward; or its falling behind.
 

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