The
Three Trillion Dollar War
by
Joseph E. Stiglitz
With
March 20 marking the fifth anniversary of the
United States-led invasion of Iraq, it’s time to
take stock of what has happened. In our new book
The Three Trillion Dollar War , Harvard’s Linda
Bilmes and I conservatively estimate the economic
cost of the war to the US to be $3 trillion, and
the costs to the rest of the world to be another
$3 trillion – far higher than the Bush
administration’s estimates before the war. The
Bush team not only misled the world about the
war’s possible costs, but has also sought to
obscure the costs as the war has gone on.
This
is not surprising. After all, the Bush
administration lied about everything else, from
Saddam Hussein’s weapons of mass destruction to
his supposed link with al-Qaeda. Indeed, only
after the US-led invasion did Iraq become a
breeding ground for terrorists.
The
Bush administration said the war would cost $50
billion. The US now spends that amount in Iraq
every three months. To put that number in context:
for one-sixth of the cost of the war, the US could
put its social security system on a sound footing
for more than a half-century, without cutting
benefits or raising contributions.
Moreover,
the Bush administration cut taxes for the rich as
it went to war, despite running a budget deficit.
As a result, it has had to use deficit spending
– much of it financed from abroad –to pay for
the war. This is the first war in American history
that has not demanded some sacrifice from citizens
through higher taxes; instead, the entire cost is
being passed onto future generations. Unless
things change, the US national debt – which was
$5.7 trillion when Bush became president – will
be $2 trillion higher because of the war (in
addition to the $800 billion increase under Bush
before the war) .
Was
this incompetence or dishonesty? Almost surely
both. Cash accounting meant that the Bush
administration focused on today’s costs, not
future costs, including disability and health care
for returning veterans. Only years after the war
began did the administration order the specially
armored vehicles that would have saved the lives
of many killed by roadside bombs. Not wanting to
reintroduce a draft, and finding it difficult to
recruit for an unpopular war, troops have been
forced into two, three, or four stress-filled
deployments.
The
administration has tried to keep the war’s costs
from the American public. Veterans groups have
used the Freedom of Information Act to discover
the total number of injured – 15 times the
number of fatalities. Already, 52,000 returning
veterans have been diagnosed with Post Traumatic
Stress Syndrome. America will need to provide
disability compensation to an estimated 40% of the
1.65 million troops that have already been
deployed. And, of course, the bleeding will
continue as long as the war continues, with the
health care and disability bill amounting to more
than $600 billion (in present-value terms).
Ideology
and profiteering have also played a role in
driving up the war’s costs. America has relied
on private contractors, which have not come cheap.
A Blackwater Security guard can cost more than
$1,000 per day, not including disability and life
insurance, which is paid for by the government.
When unemployment rates in Iraq soared to 60%,
hiring Iraqis would have made sense; but the
contractors preferred to import cheap labor from
Nepal, Philippines, and other countries.
The
war has had only two winners: oil companies and
defense contractors. The stock price of
Halliburton, Vice President Dick Cheney’s old
company, has soared. But even as the government
turned increasingly to contractors, it reduced its
oversight.
The
largest cost of this mismanaged war has been borne
by Iraq. Half of Iraq’s doctors have been killed
or have left the country, unemployment stands at
25%, and, five years after the war’s start,
Baghdad still has less than eight hours of
electricity a day. Out of Iraq’s total
population of around 28 million, four million are
displaced and two million have fled the country.
The
thousands of violent deaths have inured most
Westerners to what is going on: a bomb blast that
kills 25 hardly seems newsworthy anymore. But
statistical studies of death rates before and
after the invasion tell some of the grim reality.
They suggest additional deaths from a low of
around 450,000 in the first 40 months of the war
(150,000 of them violent deaths) to 600,000.
With
so many people in Iraq suffering so much in so
many ways, it may seem callous to discuss the
economic costs. And it may seem particularly
self-absorbed to focus on the economic costs to
America, which embarked on this war in violation
of international law. But the economic costs are
enormous, and they go well beyond budgetary
outlays. Next month, I will explain how the war
has contributed to America’s current economic
woes.
Americans
like to say that there is no such thing as a free
lunch. Nor is there such a thing as a free war.
The US – and the world – will be paying the
price for decades to come.
Joseph
E. Stiglitz, winner of the 2001 Nobel Prize in
economics, is Professor of Economics at Columbia
University and co-author, with Linda Bilmes, of
The Three Trillion Dollar War: The True Costs of
the Iraq Conflict.
Copyright:
Project Syndicate, 2008.
www.project-syndicate.org