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Policy Report
January 2001
The Military Budget Under Bush:
Early Warning Signs
By Richard Kaufman
Richard Kaufman is the director
of the Bethesda Research Institute and the Vice Chair of Economists Allied
for Armed Reduction.
 
milbudget.pdf
The U.S. emerged from the cold war as the only military
and economic superpower and maintained that position throughout the 1990s
while substantially reducing military spending and force levels. The peace
dividend produced by the spending reductions contributed significantly
to Americas sustained economic expansion by easing pressures on
the federal budget, making possible lower interest rates, and fueling
greater investment. Although it is arguable whether the best use was made
of the resources that were freed, it is unquestionable that military cuts
were a major cause of the record long recovery.
The U.S. is now at an important crossroads. The military
budget has begun to rise once again. Many Americans question the appropriateness
of giving more resources to this sector in the absence of credible threats
to U.S. security and the relative peace that prevails around the world.
Given the situation in Washington, however, the question is, realistically,
how fast will the military budget continue to rise in the administration
of George W. Bush? A brief review of the trends will provide some basis
for understanding the options that lie before the new administration and
the nation.
After peaking at $448 Billion (all figures used in this
article are in inflation-adjusted fiscal year 2001 dollars) in 1985, the
military budget (officially termed the National Defense Budget) reached
a low point of $291 billion in 1998 and has been rising since then. The
budget approved for FY 2001 is $310 billion. This amount already compares
favorably with the average annual budgets during the cold war. The averages
for each 10 year period since 1950 are as follows:
1951 - 1960: $315.3 billion
1961 - 1970: $355.7 billion
1971 - 1980: $297.1 billion
1982 - 1990: $402.9 billion
The average for the 4 decades, 1951 through 1990 is $342.6
billion. At $310 billion, the current military budget is 90 percent of
the cold war average.
The 90 percent figure is a conservative one as the averages
actually exaggerate the levels of the cold war budgets. They exclude the
years of the late 1940s when demobilization after World War II brought
about very large reductions and left very low budgets, and they include
the temporarily inflated budgets during the limited wars in Korea and
Vietnam.
A literal interpretation of the statements made about defense
by George W. Bush during the campaign and since the election could leave
some doubt as to whether the buildup will continue and accelerate. Bush
said he would increase defense spending by $45 billion over the next 10
years. Such an action would amount to a modest annual rise but a sustained
one. He also said that he would modernize some existing weapons on a selective
basis and use the window of opportunity presented by our relative peace
to skip a generation of technology in order, according to
his advisors, to acquire new weapons that are more lethal and mobile.
Some hopeful observers believe Bush may cancel or delay
some of the more expensive weapons under development such as the F-22
aircraft and the V-22 Osprey aircraft. Many consider these weapons to
be among the Pentagons cold war relics and within that generation
of weapons that could well be skipped. When Dick Cheney was Defense Secretary
he tried to cancel a number of systems including the Osprey, the Seawolf
Submarine and the Midgetman missile. One Bush advisor, Dov Zakheim, who
was Defense Undersecretary for Policy under Reagan, said about the controversy
over the high costs of tactical aircraft, that there arent enough
resources for all the tactical aircraft programs, and something
has to give. Donald Rumsfeld Bushs choice for Defense Secretary,
is believed to share these views. These facts, and the widely held views
of Bush, his foreign policy advisors and Republican leaders in Congress,
all of whom believe that Clinton has sent military forces to too many
places around the world, can be interpreted as indicators of more moderation
in military policy in the next four years.
However, there are other factors that lead to the opposite
conclusion. One is Bushs intentions. They are not altogether clear
but so far as we now know they do not exclude the possibility of accelerating
the existing buildup. During the presidential campaign, Vice President
Gore contrasted his position that military spending should be increased
by $100 billion over the next 10 years with Governor Bushs promise
to spend a lesser amount over the same period in order to make it seem
that he would be more generous to the military than Bush. But the Bush
camp told all who would listen that the amount put forward by Bush covered
only certain specific programs and that Bush would not propose a top
line numberthat is, a figure for the total defense budgetuntil
there is a thorough review of the defense program. Such a review is supposed
to take place this year.
The second factor that needs to be kept in mind when considering
Bushs defense policy is national missile defense. Bush said during
the campaign that he would accelerate this program and that he supports
a comprehensive missile defense system rather than the limited land-based
defense supported by Clinton. The comprehensive system includes land based,
sea based, and possibly space based missile interceptors. He went on to
say that his administration would deploy at the earliest possible
time both theater and national missile defenses. In addition to
defending the continental U.S. he would deploy interceptors to defend
our allies in Asia.
The approach favored by Bush is the most expansive and expensive
variant of missile defense programs. The program considered by the Clinton
administration would cost about $34 billion and could be expanded at a
total cost of about $60 billion. The Bush NMD, adjusted for likely schedule
delays and cost increases, would cost about $100 billion.
Donald Rumsfeld chaired a commission established by Congress
which concluded in 1998 that North Korea and Iran were developing missile
capabilities that could threaten the U.S. faster than was previously thought.
The report strengthened support in Congress for the national missile defense
program. Rumsfeld chairs another congressional commission, due to issue
its report soon, that will reportedly endorse putting weapons in space
to defend U.S. satellites and attack those of potential enemies. This
would mean an entire new generation of weapons and possibly a spacebased
arms race with other nations who are not likely to remain passive while
the U.S. deploys these new weapons. It is not known how much a space based
warfare program would cost. But it, together with NMD begins to resemble
President Reagans Star Wars proposal and could be very expensive
indeed. If the program goes forward, one might expect a large step up
in R&D for space warfare. At least one of the military service chiefs,
Air Force Chief of Staff Michael E. Ryan, has spoken out publicly in favor
of it.
Gen. Ryans support for a space-based warfare capability
raises the subject of the role of the military services in decisions about
the military budget. This is the third factor that needs to be kept in
mind when considering Bushsor any presidentsmilitary
policy. It is obvious that the military services play an important part
in the determination about the size and composition of each years
military budget and about military plans in general. But the size of their
role is not generally appreciated. Because of their influence with Congress
and the public, no President or Defense Secretary can afford to ignore,
antagonize or lose the confidence of the military services. In fact, a
lot of pandering goes on here no matter who occupies the White House.
But the military is not supposed to be able determine its
budget by itself. There are supposed to be the usual checks and balances.
Along with all the other agencies of the Federal Government, the Pentagons
budget is reviewed by the Office of Management and Budget. The Secretary
of Defense, the President, and Congress are also part of the formal process.
Here, roughly, is how the defense budget process is supposed
to work. First, the President communicates his military policy to the
Secretary of Defense. The Defense Secretary then issues a detailed policy
guidance document for the military services. Each of the services are
supposed to reply with a report showing how their programs fit in to the
presidents policy. In theory, those programs that are not compatible
with the presidents policy should be at least curtailed, and, if
the resources the services want to spend compete with the presidents
priorities, the services should give way. The military bureaucracy and
inter-service rivalry being what they are, that is not what always happens.
There is a strong preference within the military to continue old programs,
whether they fit any new policy, and add new ones as the occasions arise.
The Defense Secretarys task is to reconcile the differences between
the presidents policy guidance and the military programs. There
proceeds a period of scrutiny of the services programs and some hard bargaining.
Inevitably, the arms lobby and Congress become involved.
Technically, this phase of the budget processreconciling
the presidents policy with the wants of the militaryoccurs
in the second half of the calendar year. The President then submits his
budget in the new year, and the congressional appropriations process takes
up the next several or many months. As we shall see, the military services,
with the help of Congress, have punched a gaping hole in this process.
Over the past several years, the services have been arguing
for larger budgets by emphasizing what is referred to as the plans-funding
mismatch. What is meant by this term is that future budgets will have
to be substantially increased in order to provide the funds to carry out
present military plans. (To digress slightly, in earlier years, this might
have been termed the plans-funding gapas in the cases of the bomber
gap and the missile gap which were supposed to exist between us and the
Soviet Union, but did not. However, this gap or mismatch is between us
and ourselves, not some potential enemy.) It is always the case that there
are things the military wants but cannot afford. Many of the struggles
during the budget cycle in which the services try to enlarge their shares
are usually fought out internally so as to not unduly embarrass the major
actors, especially the administration. Of course, military leaders have
often made end runs up to Capitol Hill to try to get this or that item
restored or enlarged. What is significant about the effort to close the
plans-funding gap is not only the fact that military leaders have gone
on record to say that our national security will be in jeopardy if budgets
are not substantially increased, but that the service chiefs, led by the
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, now take their cases directly to
the House and Senate Armed Services Committees for a full fledged public
hearing while the budget process is in its most critical phase. This is
different than the normal round of military hearings that take place in
Congress in the spring after the president has submitted his budget.
The emphasis placed by Congress on the priorities of the
military services, as opposed to those of the White House, is symptomatic
of the way the budget now works. There was a time when the items that
the services were not able to get funded during the budget process were
simply called the militarys wish lists. Several years
ago, leaders of the military committees in Congress asked the service
chiefs to provide their wish lists to the committees in letter form. These
at first were called the services Unfunded Requirements,
and were then renamed the Unfunded Priorities Lists or UPLs,
in recognition of the nicety that items should not be called requirements
until officially approved.
The new process became further formalized in September 1998,
when Gen. Henry H. Shelton, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, in
effect, presented a large portion of the services unfunded priorities
to Congress in a public hearing. Shelton then announced in that hearing
before the Senate Armed Services Committee that the department needed
an increase in its budget of $25 billion a year just to reverse the decline
in readiness. That public announcement surprised even some of the Pentagons
most ardent supporters in Congress. Congress had been adding billions
of dollars each year to Clintons defense budget proposals, mostly
for a patchwork of weapons the services did not request, and much of which
was labeled Congressional Pork by Senator John McCain. But until that
appearance before Congress, the elected representatives had been led to
believe that there was no major readiness problem. But Congress and the
White House quickly fell into line. The budget for readiness and pay was
subsequently increased although not by as much as the Pentagon wanted.
At the same time, the procurement side of the budget was
increasing at a fairly rapid rate and in 1999 reached the $60 billion
per year goal set by the Pentagon for itself a few years earlier. However,
the services realized that with the rapid escalation in the costs of weapons,
such as the F-22 aircraft which was threatening to cost about $200 million
per plane, that they would need relief in this area as well.
Throughout the year 2000 warning signs were coming out of
the Pentagon and its allies in Washington that larger infusions of cash
were needed for arms purchases. In late September 2000 the service chiefs
returned to Congress, this time to raise the bar for procurement. General
Shelton would not say precisely how much money the military wants to acquire
new weapons but he presented a series of charts showing what he believed
the shortfalls are in various categories. The figure implicit in the charts
for both readiness and procurement was $30 to $50 billion per year. The
chiefs of the services apparently want more than that. When Air Force
Chief Ryan was asked by a member of the Senate Committee how much additional
funds the Air Force wants just for the Air Force, he said between $20-$30
billion a year. Sheltons coyness and Ryans bluntness suggests
that the figure will be closer to $50 billion than $30 billion per year,
and possibly higher.
While the military leaders have been intentionally vague
about how much more money they want, they have been very specific about
how they would spend it. The military services want to continue funding
the expensive tactical aircraft programs now underway, many more ships
and submarines, and a new generation of lighter ground weapons, which
the Army calls the Medium Weight Force. They also want more money for
operations and maintenance, and higher pay and benefits. Bush promised
during the campaign to add $1 billion for military pay, although a substantial
pay increase was recently enacted. But that amount and the rest of the
funds he specified will not come close to eliminating the plans-funding
mismatch, as defined by the military.
How much will all this cost? A reasonable assumption is
that military spending will rise by about $30 billion per year, within
a few years, as an interim measure. The military services have set their
sights much higher. But unless the new president is willing to present
the public with military sticker shock early in his administration, the
likelihood is that defense funding will rise at a rate of about 2 or 2½
percent per year over the next several years or more. Compounded, this
type of increase would reach the levels now being demanded in a relatively
short time, and might have some political appeal as a moderate
approach. It would be a compromise from the $50 billion plus figure the
service chiefs would like added to their budget in the first year, and
substantially less than increases being proposed by others. Some military
leaders and former officials have proposed that the defense budget be
enlarged to four percent of GDPat a cost of $90 to $100 billion
per year.
One possible path for the military budget is based on the
assumption that Bushs first budget includes funds to supplement
the amount appropriated for 2001, a common practice to cover unanticipated
costs such as those involved in peacekeeping efforts in Bosnia and Kosovo.
The supplemental has the effect of raising the base for the following
year, in this case FY 2002. Assume the supplemental is $3 billion, a conservative
figure in light of past actions. The FY 2002 budget would include some
increased funds for national missile defense, and additional money equivalent
to about 2½ percent of the 2001 defense budget. In those circumstances
the defense budget for the coming year, FY 2002, would rise by $10 billion
over the present figure. Each year thereafter, the budget would increase
by about $7 billion. As a result, in the fourth year, FY 2005, the budget
will have increased by $31 billion. By FY 2007, the increase will have
been $45 billion.
Applying the $31 billion increase to the current defense
budget figure of $310 billion plus the $3 billion supplemental produces
a total of $344 billion for defense in 2005. In real terms, that number
is larger than the average annual amount budgeted for the cold war in
the years 1951-1990.
To provide some perspective, a few domestic ratios and international
comparisons should be mentioned. These will be in outlay terms. Throughout
this paper amounts cited are budgeted rather than spent to be consistent
and also because budgets produce the more accurate picture during the
early stages of a military buildup. This is due to the lags that exist
between the time a budget is authorized and actual outlays.
Military outlays now comprise about 3 percent of GDP, about
half of what they absorbed during the 1980s. As the economy expanded in
the 1990s while military spending declined, this was to be expected. Nevertheless,
the absolute amount of military spending remains very large and is growing
larger. The budgetary category National Defense comprises 16 percent of
total U.S. Government outlays and close to 50 percent of discretionary
outlays.
The U.S. military budget is larger than the budget of all
our NATO allies combined, plus the budgets of the countries considered
to be our likely adversaries. Russia, the worlds second largest
military power, spends an estimated $55 billion on its military. China
spends about $38 billion. The U.S. share of global military spending has
gone up since 1985, from 30 percent to 36 percent.
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