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March
2, 2008
War at Any
Cost?
The Total
Economic Cost of the War Beyond the Federal
Budget
by Rep. Ron Paul, MD
A
Statement to the Joint Economic Committee, February
28, 2008:
Mr. Chairman,
In recent months the undeclared war in Iraq
seems not to have been on the minds of most
Americans. News of the violence and deprivation
which ordinary Iraqis are forced to deal with on a
daily basis rarely makes it to the front pages.
Instead, we read in the newspapers numerous slanted
stories about the how the surge is succeeding and
reducing violence. Never does anyone dare to
discuss the costs of the war or its
implications.
There are the direct costs of the war, the costs
of maintaining bases, providing food, water, and
supplies, which the administration vastly
underestimated before embarking on their quest in
Iraq. These costs run into the tens of billions of
dollars per month, and I shudder to think what the
total direct costs will add up to when we finally
pull out.
Then there are the opportunity costs, those
which decision makers in Washington almost never
discuss. Imagine that the war in Iraq had never
happened, and the hundreds of billions of dollars
we have spent so far were still in the hands of
taxpayers and businesses. How many jobs could have
been created, how much money could have been saved,
invested, and put to productive use?
Unfortunately, it appears too many policymakers
in Washington still cling to the broken window
fallacy, long since discredited by the 19th century
French economist Frédéric Bastiat,
that destruction is a good thing because jobs are
created to rebuild what is destroyed. This
pernicious fallacy is unfortunately widespread in
our society today because those in positions of
power and influence only recognize what is seen,
and ignore what is unseen.
Running a deficit of hundreds of billions of
dollars per year in order to fund our misadventure
is unsustainable. Eventually those debts must be
repaid, but this country is in such poor financial
shape that when our creditors come knocking, we
will have little with which to pay them. Our
imperial system of military bases set up in
protectorate states around the world is completely
dependent on the continuing willingness of
foreigners to finance our deficits. When the credit
dries up we will find ourselves in a dire
situation. Americans will suffer under a
combination of confiscatory taxation, double-digit
inflation, and the sale of massive amounts of land
and capital goods to our foreign creditors.
The continuation of the war in Iraq will end in
disaster for this country. Parallels between the
Roman empire and our own are numerous, although our
decline and fall will happen far quicker than that
of Rome. The current financial crisis has awakened
some to the perils that await us, but solutions
that address the root of the problem and seek to
fix it are nowhere to be found. There must be a sea
change in the attitudes and thinking of Americans
and their leaders. The welfare-warfare state must
be abolished, respect for private property and
individual liberties restored, and we must return
to the limited-government ideals of our Founding
Fathers. Any other course will doom our nation to
the dustbin of history.
Paul
Archive
Dr. Ron Paul is a Republican
member of Congress from Texas.
Because
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