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Security Spending Primer:
Getting
Smart About The Pentagon Budget
How do people influence federal spending
decisions and stop fighting over smaller and smaller
“slices of the budgetary pie”? What will make our
nation more secure?
National Priorities Project is proud to release the Security
Spending Primer: Getting Smart About The Pentagon
Budget. (PDF
Document)
This Primer is a is a “one-stop-shopping”
resource and has two main goals:
- to provide comprehensive, easy-to-understand information on
the complexity of the federal budget process; and
- to help build the capacity of people across the United
States who want their voices and their priorities to be heard in
the debate over federal spending in general and military
spending in particular.
Even though federal spending and policy priorities have an
enormous impact on individual lives, the budgeting and policy-making
process remains mysterious to most Americans. NPP believes that
good, concrete information strengthens social change work. In order
to make our federal government more accountable, people - especially
those most affected by social inequities - must play a central role
in identifying the changes essential to creating better lives for
themselves and future generations. They must have access to accurate
information that supports effective strategies.
The Primer answers the most frequently asked questions about, and
supplies the most commonly requested information on, the Pentagon
budget and U.S. military spending and is based on decades of
experience in military budget analysis.
It contains 16 two-page fact sheets on topics ranging from
nuclear weapons to the employment impact of U.S. military and
domestic spending choices to the military cost of securing energy.
We designed these fact sheets to be read separately or as a group.
We have also included a host of resources: organizational contact
lists, sample NPP tools, resources lists, a glossary and
more.
Key findings in the primer include:
- Total spending on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan will
exceed $1 trillion February/March 2010.
- From FY 2001 to FY 2008, federal grants to state and local
governments increased 0.57% for every 1% increase in total
federal budget authority. Yet, during the same period,
federal military expenditures increased 1.47% for every 1% in
total federal budget authority. In other words, as the
“budgetary pie” increased, the defense slice got bigger and
fatter and the “grants to the states” slice of the pie got
smaller .
- Even without including current war allocations, U.S.
military spending is at its highest level since World War
II. This takes into account the war-time budgets of
Vietnam and Korea.
- Despite rhetoric to the contrary, the Obama Administration
is not cutting defense. In fact, the Pentagon budget is
projected to grow25% over the next decade.
- This is an unprecedented period in our nation's history. Two
wars, staggering national debt, the economic crisis and an
impending climate crisis make these extremely challenging times.
At the same time, President Obama endeavors to respond to the
sweeping mandate for change.
NPP is indebted to our collaborators in this
project: Frida Berrigan, Senior Program Associate of
the Arms and Security Initiative at the New America
Foundation Ruth Flower, Associate Executive Secretary for
Legislative Programs at Friends Committee on National Legislation
(FCNL) Miriam Pemberton, Peace and Security Editor of Foreign
Policy in Focus at the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS)
Heidi Garrett-Peltier, Research Assistant at the Political
Economy Research Institute (PERI) at the University of
Massachusetts, Amherst Robert Pollin, Professor of
Economics and founding Co-Director of the Political Economy Research
Institute (PERI) at the University of Massachusetts,
Amherst Susan Shaer, Executive Director of Women's Action
for New Directions (WAND)
For more
information: Jo Comerford, Executive Director (jo@nationalpriorities.org,
413.559.1649) Chris Hellman, Director of Research
(chris@nationalpriorities.org) National
Priorities Project www.nationalpriorities.org |
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National Priorities Project
(NPP) is a 501(c)(3) research organization that analyzes and
clarifies federal data so that people can understand and influence
how their tax dollars are spent. Located in Northampton, MA, since
1983, NPP focuses on the impact of federal spending and other
policies at the national, state, congressional district and local
levels. Find out more at our website.
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