More Defense Spending Does Not Equal More Safety
Congress continues to allocate funds to produce weapons that the Pentagon itself says it doesn't need.

The brutal invasion of Ukraine by Russia has renewed conservatives' calls for large increases of our defense budget. The extra money, we are told, would fund more weapons to better prepare us to respond to aggression in a world that looks increasingly dangerous. As compelling as these arguments can be in a stressful time, it's not quite so simple.
Providing military defense is a valid function of the federal government. However, that doesn't give license to Congress to simply pile on more spending, even when there are dangers out there. Nor does it mean that more spending will result in a completely safe world for us Americans. That's in part because that world doesn't exist. There's only so much safety money can buy.
While I certainly don't pretend to know what the optimal budget for our military is, we are already spending a large amount on national security and on the Pentagon. In fiscal year 2023, the United States is expected to spend more than $770 billion on national defense, with $729 billion of this amount being for the Department of Defense's military operations. This enormous sum is more than the next 10 countries spend combined. Russia, for instance, spends close to $62 billion. France and Germany spend almost $53 billion each. Assuming China's numbers are accurate, it spends $252 billion.
When considering how much more money we think is worth spending, we must keep in mind that not every additional dollar of military spending will result in enhanced national security. That's because government intentions do not equal results. Elected officials and bureaucrats have weak incentives to sensibly manage tax dollars. They are not rewarded for maximizing taxpayer value, nor are they usually punished for unnecessary risks. In addition, interest groups often drive political decisions that run counter to the best interest of the public.
Military spending is not immune from these forces any more than the entitlement and welfare parts of the budget. Just look at the arms-industry lobbying machine, which in 2021 alone spent $117 million in lobbying expenditures and used 763 lobbyists, likely pushing for as much Pentagon spending as they can get. This explains why Congress continues to allocate funds to produce weapons that the Pentagon itself says it doesn't need. It also explains the endless saga of its cost overruns, as well as delays and malfunctions such as those of the F-35. The Defense Department has been allowed to fail its audits repeatedly, meaning no one really knows where some of that money goes. The result is a less-than-optimal allocation of our large defense budget.
These facts alone don't mean there are no grounds for the argument that the military is underfunded to do everything Congress demands of it. In 2017, the American Enterprise Institute's Mackenzie Eaglen argued for more military spending because "the United States now fields a military that could not meet even the requirements of a benign Clinton-era world," and that "while the United States continues to field the best military personnel in the world, policy makers have asked them to do too much with too little for too long."
I have no reason to doubt Eaglen's claim. However, unless the political system that produced these poor outcomes is reformed, one should remain skeptical about the effectiveness of even more spending.
What about the idea that we should annually spend four percent of our GDP on defense, as opposed to the three percent we are now spending? I find this argument lacking. As a measure of economic activity, GDP has very little to do with our ability to defend ourselves. There's no reason for three percent, four percent, or any other portion of GDP to be considered the right number.
If the defense-spending-to-GDP measurement reflects anything, it's affordability. That brings us to our enormous budget deficits and resulting growing debt. Unless Congress cuts non-defense spending significantly, growing the military budget would grow the deficit. However, if additional defense spending is deficit-financed, then we can expect slower growth, as Harvard economist Robert Barro and I demonstrated in a study back in 2013. That reduces, not increases, the affordability of our defense budget.
In other words, let's make sure we're asking the right questions before rushing to jack up the defense budget.
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"The brutal invasion ..." stopped right there. I am fed up with these ridiculous virtue-signalling adjectives which serve no purpose but to presage a shift in topic.
Is there such a think as a non-brutal invasion?
Same applies to "horrific" applied to everything the author doesn't approve of.
Just stop it.
I am fed up with these ridiculous virtue-signalling adjectives
Personally, I am fed up with the ridiculous overuse of the adjective "ridiculous" in virtue-signal complaints about virtue-signaling. It is utterly ridiculous. Isn't there a news source that doesn't use any adjectives at all?
Back in my day we called that "yellow journalism".
That's, uh, journalism of color now...
OK, mostly peaceful invasion.
Now do education spending.
Now do healthcare spending.
Now do "energy" spending.
Now do Social Security spending.
Now do transportation spending.
Now do agriculture spending.
Oh and, fuck Joe Biden.
Fuck Joe Biden.
OMG! You might be on to something.
Ukraine and NATO disagree.
Pretty sure 8 trillion over 10 years could do a lot for America otherwise. Keep infrastructure properly maintained, tax people less, etc. etc.
But no- let's just give it all to the military industrial complex instead.
Someone has to stand up to Russia! How’s the borsch, comrade?
Compare defense spending to medicaid or Medicare.
MIComplex only gets 10% of FedGov spending, and that deters aggression around the world. Coerced altruism, aka Social Services, consumes 80%.
Apologize for your phrase "give it all."
Aggression from whom?
This is a pretty flabby critique of our staggeringly wasteful defense budget. I'm afraid Dr. de Rugy is pretty much phoning this one in. Many of our major weapons systems--the existing B-1 and B-2 bombers, and new yet to be B-21, for example--are entirely redundant, and dysfunctional, existing only to spend money. Next time, Dr. de Rugy, do some research, for example, try
http://www.avanneman.com/tag/military-spending/
But if we don't start world war 3 for the right of Ukrainian oligarchs to work with US/western oligarchs to steal money from the middle and working class, then democracy dies forever!
Wait. I thought democracy died when Trump got elected, again when he didn't get elected, when Georgia banned dingers from voting, and, along with all life on earth, from the climate Armageddons in 1980, 1990, 2000, 2010, and 2020. Just how many lives does this democracy thing have?
It has to be repeatedly fortified until the Davos/WEF crowd can fortify it permanently
Fake "invasion" when migrants cross the southern border: OMG IT'S A NATIONAL EMERGENCY SEND THE MILITARY TO DEFEND THE COUNTRY
Real invasion when a sovereign nation sends the actual military to seize territory: NO BIG DEAL NOT AN ISSUE WHO GIVES A FUCK
I thought fat people were supposed to be jolly.
Perhaps if congress were forbidden to direct military spending to their own states/districts?
Surely Lockheed could produce less expensively in just a few central locations instead of all over the (congressional) map. It just might be possible to run a military without political indoctrination classes, and ships that can't sail because of a vaccine refusnik. Of course, in the face of democrat party control, any military spending is excessive, because they will never u se the military for any military purpose, only social justice.
I looked to see if an economist would mention that the huge increase in this budget was less than inflation, but I guess I missed it.
Our last "defense" spending was in 1945. It should be called "military" spending now.
Our offense was much better than outer defense was.
I'm on the fence, concidering the military is pushing to have compleatly useless sissies that are blindly loyal to only the progressives, technology may be our only shot at winning a war.
How about defund the police? How'd that work out?
Touche! I think America could tweak mil spending up a teensy bit over current but the bigger point is Trump was right. The rest of the free world needs to invest in deterrence. Deterrence is cheaper than open conflict.
Defense budget = ~10% of FedGov spending.
Social Services = 80%
Leave the defense budget alone. Deterrance of war around the world is subsumed in our budget for "Defense of the Nation."
they won't/can't cut defense for the same reason they can't cut anything: people somewhere might lose their jobs that only exist because of the government misallocating resources
Having over 800 bases around the world does nothing but waste money.
Ron Paul is correct. we need to close all foreign bases, bring our people home and place as many as needed on the southern border.
We do not need bases in far away countries nor in Germany, Britain or Iraq.
America is not the world's policeman despite what some may believe and the idea of American exceptionalism and the progressive models that have fueled it have caused more harm than good. America is not the world's policeman, nor does it have any business staging color revolutions or any other kind of revolution just because someone in a Washington,D.C. think tank decides one is needed.
we could reduce military spemding by 60% and still maintain more than adequate defense, NOT foreign bases used to stage coups and other mischief around the world.
One would come to the conclusion that after ten years in Viet Nam and twenty years in Afghanistan and decades of foreign bases, those in Washington would have gotten the message by now. It appears they haven't. There's too much money to be made and of course , spread out to as many congressional districts as possible to make sure any and every program gets approved by congress.
America's interventionist policies have created worse conditions for the people in Iraq, Afghanistan Syria, Yemen, Libya as well as in Latin America where Washington has bloodied its hands for the past 120 years.
Until the American people finally decide, it's not in their best interests to have over 800 bases around the world, it's not in the best interest of neither the American people nor those in other countries for Washington to inject itself and stage another color revolution, nothing will change and the words of President Eisenhower, warning us of the impending military industrial complex will be largely forgotten.
more a valid function of General Dynamics
And that's where most of it goes. But unfortunately, US politicians of all stripes can't seem to get over the idea that we are on this planet to save the rest of it, whether that is by providing a constant defense or shipping them unlimited arms at no cost. I just saw something that said that we shipped 17000 [yes, that's thousand] anti-tank weapons. Just how many fucking tanks does Russia even have? Reports say 12000 total.
But big government virtue signals by overspending on everything, so why should that be any different. $500/wk covid relief, even if you were only earning $100/wk working a few hours before. The most of any country on education. The most on social programs, we supplied vaccines to the world, fucking foreign aid to more than 200 countries and regions [and there's only 195 countries in the world total].
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Who pointed it out to me SITE….., http://moneystar33.blogspot.com/
And Lockheed, and Boeing and Raytheon.
And every other congressional district with a defense contractor present.