Sunday, January 08, 2006

Guardian: Real Cost of Iraq War Could Be Over $2 Trillion

The real cost to the US of the Iraq war is likely to be between $1 trillion and $2 trillion, up to 10 times more than previously thought, according to a report written by a Nobel prize-winning economist and a Harvard budget expert.

The study, which expanded on traditional estimates by including such costs as lifetime disability and healthcare for troops injured in the conflict as well as the impact on the American economy, concluded that the US government is continuing to underestimate the cost of the war.

Few have taken this into consideration and hopefully this will enter into the public debate about the war's continuation soon.

The paper on the real cost of the war, written by Joseph Stiglitz, a Columbia University professor who won the Nobel prize for economics in 2001, and Linda Bilmes, a Harvard budget expert, is likely to add to the pressure on the White House on the war. It also followed the revelation this week that the White House had scaled back ambitions to rebuild Iraq and did not intend to seek funds for reconstruction.

Mr Stiglitz told the Guardian that despite the staggering costs laid out in their paper the economists had erred on the side of caution. "Our estimates are very conservative, and it could be that the final costs will be much higher. And it should be noted they do not include the costs of the conflict to either Iraq or the UK."

Three years later, with more than 140,000 US soldiers on the ground in Iraq, even the $200bn figure (the current conventionally presumed estimate of the war) was very low, according to the two economists.

And let's remember that the Bush administration had originally maintained that figure was too high and that Paul Wolfowitz said Iraq could pay for its own reconstruction.

Congress has appropriated $251bn for military operations, and the Congressional budget office has now estimated that under one plausible scenario the Iraq war will cost over $230bn more in the next 10 years. According to Mr Stiglitz and Ms Bilmes, whose paper is due to be presented to the Allied Social Sciences Association in Boston tomorrow, there are substantial future costs not included in the Congressional calculations.

For instance, the latest Pentagon figures show that more than 16,000 military personnel have been wounded in Iraq. Due to improvements in body armour, there has been an unusually high number of soldiers who have survived major wounds such as brain damage, spinal injuries and amputations. The economists predict the cost of lifetime care for the thousands of troops who have suffered brain injuries alone could run to $35bn. Taking in increased defence spending as a result of the war, veterans' disability payments and demobilisation costs, the economists predict the budgetary costs of the war alone could approach $1 trillion.
The paper also came amid the first indications from the Pentagon that it intended to scale down its costly presence in Iraq this year.


Dear God, and according to another recent study, if we had simply spent more on body armor in preparation for the war we might have avoided many of those injuries.

The unforeseen costs of the war have been blamed on poor planning and vision by the architects of the invasion. In a frank admission yesterday, Paul Bremer, the first US administrator of postwar Iraq, said the Americans did not anticipate the uprising that has persisted since flaring in 2004. "We really didn't see the insurgency coming," he told NBC television.

The didn't see it so much that they basically didn't do any pre-war planning for the post-invasion period.

But the economists' costings went much further than the economic value of lives lost. They factored in items such as the higher oil prices which could partly be attributed to the war. They also calculated the effect if a proportion of the money spent on the Iraq war was allocated to other causes. These factors could add tens of billions of dollars.
Mr Stiglitz, a former World Bank chief economist, said the paper, which will be available on josephstiglitz.com, did not attempt to explain whether Americans were deliberately misled or whether the underestimate was due to incompetence.


Personally, I think it's a little of column a and a little of columb b, to some extent, given that some of these items aren't what I think anyone expects to be factored in when they are given an estimate - though they should be.

But in terms of the total cost of the war "there may have been alternative ways of spending a fraction of that amount that would have enhanced America's security more, and done a better job in winning the hearts and minds of those in the Middle East and promoting democracy".

You can say that again.

Everyday we realize more and more the extent to which this war in Iraq was a mistake. And everyday the cost to our security, our image, our pride, our economy and everything else grows bigger and bigger. Whether we will be able to overcome it remains to be seen.

2 comments:

Alexander Wolfe said...

It's far too easy to disguise the actual cost of the war. The average person will only consider the "direct" costs; the lives lost, the actual money directly spent, etc., but they won't consider the indirect costs of the war, which as this article states, are far, far greater then even we anti-war opponents had imagined.

Mr. Beer N. Hockey said...

You can add ecological costs to the zillions. On the other hand, think of the billions and billions Hollywood has/will wring out of the latest movements of the Death Machine.