Military Spending and Industrial Decline


Book Description

Diplomarbeit aus dem Jahr 2007 im Fachbereich Jura - Sonstiges, Note: 1,7, Universitat Hamburg (Universitat Hamburg), Veranstaltung: offentliche Sozialrecht, 24 Quellen im Literaturverzeichnis, Sprache: Deutsch, Abstract: In allen Epochen in der Entwicklung der modernen menschlichen Gesellschaft gibt es den historischen Nachweis, dass ein bestimmter Personenkreis im Auftrag des Herrschers bzw. spater des Staates Aufgaben der Verwaltung, Aufrechterhaltung der Ordnung (Polizei) und Rechtssprechung auch in Zeiten von Kriegsereignissen, Naturkatastrophen oder anderen wirtschaftlichen bzw. sozialen Erschutterungen des Staates durch ihre loyale Haltung zum Staat garantierten, dass die wichtigsten Funktionen eines Staates trotz der Geschehnisse weiter aufrechterhalten werden konnten. Der Soziologe Max Weber unterscheidet deshalb zwischen patrimonialen Beamten, die im wesentlichen dem jeweiligen Herrscher verpflichtet waren und den burokratischen Beamten, die fest umrissenen Kompetenzen haben und an den Staat gebunden sind. Im griechischen Staatswesen wurde erstmals festgestellt, dass Gesetze von Burgern geschaffen werden und bestimmten sozialen Zielen dienen - damit wurde erstmals die Bedeutung von Gesetzen als Regelmechanismus im Staat formuliert.




Military Expansion, Economic Decline


Book Description

By assessing the costs and benefits of military spending, the authors provide a "second opinion" on the subject of military economics. While advocates of increased military spending often stress the positive effects of the Pentagon on the economy, there has been little systematic summary of the "opportunity costs" that society pays for a large military establishment. This book fills that gap.







Reversing Industrial Decline


Book Description

Reversing America's industrial decline will require many changes in policy, particularly with regard to the taxation and regulation of manufacturing enterprises. One tool available to policymakers is the defense budget, which was used throughout the Cold War to stimulate industrial investment and technological innovation. However, the federal government currently lacks mechanisms necessary to coordinate defense spending with economic policies, and as a result military outlays seldom boost the U.S. economy as effectively as they do in other industrialized nations.




Defense Spending And Economic Growth


Book Description

This book examines the impact defense spending has on economic growth. While defense spending was not deliberately invented as a fiscal policy instrument, its importance in the composition of overall government spending and thus in determining employment is now easily recognized. In light of the collapse of the Soviet Union and the consequent reduction in the threat to the security of the United States, maintaining defense spending at the old level seems indefensible. The media has concentrated on the so-called peace dividend. However, as soon as the federal government is faced with defense cuts, it realizes the macroeconomic ramifications of such a step. Based on studies included in this volume, we examine the effects of defense spending on economic growth and investigate how the changed world political climate is likely to alter the importance and pattern of defense spending both for developed and developing countries.




Swords Into Dow Shares


Book Description

Contemporary legal doctrine holds that corporate managers have obligations, first and foremost, to maximize profits for their shareholders. This doctrine is based on the assumption that shareholders alone bear the financial risks and contribute the equity necessary for production. But what if other groups contribute assets and also risk losing their investments? What if other groups actually shelter shareholders from financial risks? Such is the case with the nation's prime defense contractors. By examining the case of defense contracting, where the federal government and, indirectly, the taxpayers assume most of the risks and costs of producing weaponry, Rachel Weber critiques the assumptions underlying our system of corporate governance.The Department of Defense provides contracts for billions of dollars, specialized components and facilities, interest subsidies, tax breaks, and regulatory relief. These public contributions make the record shareholder returns and executive compensation packages of the early 1990s all the more problematic. This book follows the case of General Dynamics, the nation's largest military shipbuilder and considered a trendsetter in the industry for its explicit shareholder orientation. The behavior of contractors like General Dynamics in the post-Cold War period raises serious concerns about the private stewardship of public funds. How can the government make contractors accountable to other public interests? In Swords into Dow Shares Rachel Weber offers some original suggestions for redirecting defense resources to foster innovation, decrease the tax burden of military spending, and help to retain and create high-wage jobs in a civilian-industrial economy.




The Political Economy of Military Spending in the United States


Book Description

This is a timely collection of essays utilizing the political economy approach to military spending, primarily by the United States. The articles deal specifically with the relationships between defense spending and: (a) political-business cycles, public opinion and the US-Soviet relationship; (b) military action - i.e. war; (c) economic performance - the trade deficit, guns versus butter issues and fiscal policy.




Beyond Guns & Butter


Book Description

Written in layman's terms, this is a book which aims to show how America can be defended without a counter-productive defence strain being placed on the national economy.




The Permanent War Economy


Book Description




The Changing Dynamics of U.S. Defense Spending


Book Description

A behind-the-scenes look at the environment for defense policy and budgeting—in Congress, the news media, and the defense industry—reveals that the appearance of stability is deceiving. Pressures are building for change. Defense spending has leveled off at about $265 billion a year in outlays. Current commitments to preserve the existing force while purchasing new weaponry are creating significant budget issues which must be addressed. This book probes beneath the surface to show how the political base for defense spending is eroding. The economic benefits of defense spending and of foreign military sales are increasingly concentrated. A few well-placed members are now the main beneficiaries of add-ons to the budget. At the same time, mergers and acquisitions have left the defense industrial base largely intact, with new weapons filling every production line. Yet it will take sharp increases in the defense budget to fund these new weapons, increases that may not be politically viable. A provocative analysis by some of the leading scholars and researchers involved with defense and foreign policy issues, this will be of great interest to experts as well as general readers.