Guns
and Pensions
A nation's choice between
spending on military defense and spending on civilian goods has often been
posed as "guns versus butter." But understanding the choices of many
nations' political leaders might be helped by examining the contrast between
their runaway spending on pensions while skimping on military defense. Huge pensions for retired government workers can
be found from small municipalities to national governments on both sides of the
Atlantic. There is a reason. For elected officials, pensions are virtually the
ideal thing to spend money on, politically speaking. Many kinds of spending of
the taxpayers' money win votes from the recipients. But raising taxes to pay
for this spending loses votes from the taxpayers. Pensions offer a way out of
this dilemma for politicians.
Creating pensions that offer generous retirement benefits wins
votes in the present by promising spending in the future. Promises cost nothing
in the short run -- and elections are held in the short run, long before the
pensions are due.
By contrast, private insurance companies that sell annuities are
forced by law to set aside enough assets to cover the cost of the annuities
they have promised to pay. But nobody can force the government to do that --
and most governments do not.
This means that it is only a matter of time before pensions are
due to be paid and there is not enough money set aside to pay for them. This
applies to Social Security and other government pensions here, as well as to
all sorts of pensions in other countries overseas.
Eventually, the truth will come out that there is just not enough
money in the till to pay what retirees were promised. But eventually can be a
long time.
A politician can win quite a few elections between now and
eventually -- and be living in comfortable retirement by the time it is
somebody else's problem to cope with the impossibility of paying retirees the
pensions they were promised.
Inflating the currency and paying pensions in dollars that won't
buy as much is just one of the ways for the government to seem to be keeping
its promises, while in fact welshing on the deal.
The politics of military spending are just the opposite of the
politics of pensions. In the short run, politicians can always cut military
spending without any immediate harm being visible, however catastrophic the
consequences may turn out to be down the road.
Despite the huge increase in government spending on domestic
programs during Franklin D. Roosevelt's administration in the 1930s, FDR cut
back on military spending. On the eve of the Second World War, the United
States had the 16th largest army in the world, right behind Portugal.
Even this small military force was so inadequately supplied with
equipment that its training was skimped. American soldiers went on maneuvers
using trucks with "tank" painted on their sides, since there were not
enough real tanks to go around.
American warplanes were not updated to match the latest warplanes
of Nazi Germany or imperial Japan. After World War II broke out, American
soldiers stationed in the Philippines were fighting for their lives using
rifles left over from the Spanish-American war, decades earlier. The hand
grenades they threw at the Japanese invaders were so old that they often failed
to explode. At the battle of Midway, of 82 Americans who flew into combat in
obsolete torpedo planes, only 12 returned alive. In Europe, our best tanks were
never as good as the Germans' best tanks, which destroyed several times as many
American tanks as the Germans lost in tank battles.
Fortunately, the quality of American warplanes eventually caught
up with and surpassed the best that the Germans and Japanese had. But a lot of
American pilots lost their lives needlessly in outdated planes before that
happened.
These were among the many prices paid for skimping on military
spending in the years leading up to World War II. But, politically, the path of
least resistance is to cut military spending in the short run and let the long
run take care of itself.
In a nuclear age, we may not have time to recover from our
short-sighted policies, as we did in World War II.
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