Decrease Increase Print Page: Print Peter Wilson, Europe correspondent
| February 28, 2008
THE Iraq war has cost the US 50-60 times more than the Bush
administration predicted and was a central cause of the sub-prime
banking crisis threatening the world economy, according to Nobel
Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz.
The former World Bank vice-president yesterday said the war had, so
far, cost the US something like $US3trillion ($3.3 trillion) compared
with the $US50-$US60-billion predicted in 2003.
Australia also faced a real bill much greater than the $2.2billion in
military spending reported last week by Australian Defence Force chief
Angus Houston, Professor Stiglitz said, pointing to higher oil prices
and other indirect costs of the wars.
Professor Stiglitz told the Chatham House think tank in London that the
Bush White House was currently estimating the cost of the war at about
$US500 billion, but that figure massively understated things such as
the medical and welfare costs of US military servicemen.
The war was now the second-most expensive in US history after World War
II and the second-longest after Vietnam, he said.
The spending on Iraq was a hidden cause of the current credit crunch
because the US central bank responded to the massive financial drain of
the war by flooding the American economy with cheap credit.
"The regulators were looking the other way and money was being lent to
anybody this side of a life-support system," he said.
That led to a housing bubble and a consumption boom, and the fallout
was plunging the US economy into recession and saddling the next US
president with the biggest budget deficit in history, he said.
Professor Stiglitz, an academic at the Columbia Business School and a
former economic adviser to president Bill Clinton, said a further
$US500 billion was going to be spent on the fighting in the next two
years and that could have been used more effectively to improve the
security and quality of life of Americans and the rest of the world.
The money being spent on the war each week would be enough to wipe out
illiteracy around the world, he said.
Just a few days' funding would be enough to provide health insurance
for US children who were not covered, he said.
The public had been encouraged by the White House to ignore the costs
of the war because of the belief that the war would somehow pay for
itself or be paid for by Iraqi oil or US allies.
"When the Bush administration went to war in Iraq it obviously didn't
focus very much on the cost. Larry Lindsey, the chief economic adviser,
said the cost was going to be between $US100billion and $US200 billion
- and for that slight moment of quasi-honesty he was fired.
"(Then defence secretary Donald) Rumsfeld responded and said 'baloney',
and the number the administration came up with was $US50 to $US60
billion. We have calculated that the cost was more like $US3 trillion.
"Three trillion is a very conservative number, the true costs are
likely to be much larger than that."
Five years after the war, the US was still spending about $US50billion
every three months on direct military costs, he said.
Professor Stiglitz and another Clinton administration economist, Linda
Bilmes, have produced a book, The Three Trillion Dollar War, pulling
together their research on the true cost of the war, which does not
include the cost to Iraq.
One of the greatest discrepancies is that the official figures do not
include the long-term healthcare and social benefits for injured
servicemen, who are surviving previously fatal attacks because of
improved body armour.
"The ratio of injuries to fatalities in a normal war is 2:1. In this
war they admitted to 7:1 but a true number is (something) like 15:1."
Some 100,000 servicemen have been diagnosed with serious psychological
problems and the soldiers doing the most tours of duty have not yet
returned.
Professor Stiglitz attributed to the Iraq war $US5-$US10 of the almost
$US80-a-barrel increase in oil prices since the start of the war,
adding that it would have been reasonable to attribute more than $US35
of that rise to the war.
He said the British bill for its role in the war was about 20 times the
pound stg. 1billion ($2.1 billion) that former prime minister Tony
Blair estimated before the war.
The British Government was yesterday ordered to release details of its
planning for the war, when the country's Information Commissioner
backed a Freedom of Information request for the minutes of two cabinet
meetings in the days before the war.
Commissioner Richard Thomas said that because of the importance of the
decision to go to war, the public interest in disclosing the minutes
outweighed the public interest in withholding the information.
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