Why Spending On Schools Beats Military Spending For Creating Jobs

Government spending on the military yields fewer jobs, dollar for dollar, than spending on domestic programs such as health care, energy, infrastructure, and education, according to new a new study.

The study documents how many jobs are created in a variety of domestic sectors for every million dollars of federal money spent. Economist Heidi Garrett-Peltier compared that to the number of jobs created for every $1 million spent on defense and found that domestic spending outpaces military spending in job creation by 21 percent (for wind energy development) to 178 percent (for elementary and secondary education).

“How our tax dollars are spent should reflect our priorities…”

“The US has a bloated military budget, and one of the reasons it has historically remained outsized is that defense spending creates jobs, both in the military and in the industries that supply goods and services to the armed forces,” says Garrett-Peltier, an assistant research professor at the Political Economy Research Institute at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst.

government spending 6 5(Credit: Brown University)

“But when we compare federal spending on defense to the alternatives, such as health care, education, clean energy, or infrastructure, we find that all of these areas create more jobs than an equivalent amount of military spending,” she adds.


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Input-Output model

Strikingly, Garrett-Peltier found that investments in elementary and secondary education create nearly three times as many American jobs as defense spending, while health care creates about twice as many jobs. Whereas $1 million spent on defense creates 6.9 direct and indirect jobs, the same amount spent on elementary and secondary education creates 19.2 jobs. $1 million spent on healthcare creates 14.3 jobs.

She used an economic model called an Input-Output (I-O) model to analyze how many jobs are created for every $1 million in spending, drawing on information from the US Economic Census, Internal Revenue Service tax documents, the US Bureau of Labor statistics, US Bureau of Economic Analysis data, and other sources.

“I-O models estimate the various components of the supply chain or the inputs that go into producing any good or service,” Garrett-Peltier writes in the study. “They also show the outputs, where each industry sells its goods or services to various categories of customers.”

“By using an I-O model, we can estimate both the direct and indirect jobs associated with any type of spending,” Garrett-Peltier continues. “For example, with military spending, the direct jobs are those created in the Department of Defense whereas the indirect jobs are created in manufacturing, transportation, IT, and other industries that supply goods and services to the military. Similarly, in education, the direct jobs are those for teachers, principals and office staff; the indirect jobs are in industries such as textbook publication, furniture manufacturing, electric utilities, and so on.”

That snapshot helps explain why domestic spending creates more American jobs, she notes. First, some of the jobs created by defense spending “leak” overseas, whereas construction or nursing jobs created by investing in infrastructure or health care are created, and remain, in the United States.

Second, the labor intensity involved in domestic spending is greater than defense spending. Whereas the military is more dependent on equipment, and funds allocated might go to products, Garrett-Peltier says, education requires people, like teachers, aides, principals, and others.

‘Reflect our priorities’

The data show that the Trump administration’s proposal to increase military spending by $54 billion would create fewer jobs than equivalent spending on health care, education, clean energy, or infrastructure, Garrett-Peltier says, and would offer less economic benefit to the nation.

“This report is especially important in helping put fact and public interest rather than myth or self-interest at the center of discussions of the Trump administration’s plan for vastly increased military spending,” says Catherine Lutz, codirector of the Costs of War Project and professor of international studies at Brown University.

“How our tax dollars are spent should reflect our priorities,” Garrett-Peltier says. “We can have a healthier, more educated population living in a cleaner environment at the same time that we can create more jobs. Looking at the $230 billion per year that the US has been spending on strictly war-related purposes since 2001, we could have created up to 3 million more jobs if we had spent these funds on various domestic priorities rather than war.”

Source: Brown University

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