I’d rather fund green jobs and disease control than jets that spontaneously combust. Wouldn’t you?
Most of us want our tax dollars to be wisely used — especially around tax time.
You’ve
probably heard a lot about corporations not paying taxes. Last year,
individuals like you contributed six times more in
income tax than corporations did.
But
have you heard about how many of your tax dollars then end up in corporate
pockets? It’s a lot — especially for corporations that contract with the
Pentagon. They collect nearly half of all military spending.
The average taxpayer
contributed about $2,000 to the military last year, according
to a breakdown my colleagues and I prepared for the Institute for Policy
Studies. More than $900 of that went to corporate military contractors.
In
2020, the largest Pentagon contractor, Lockheed Martin, took in $75 billion
from taxpayers — and paid its CEO more than $23 million.
Unfortunately, this spending isn’t buying us a more secure world.
Last
year, Congress added $25 billion the
Pentagon didn’t ask for to its already gargantuan budget. Lawmakers even
refused to let military leaders retire weapons systems they couldn’t use anymore.
The extra money favored top military contractors that gave campaign money to a
group of lawmakers, who refused to comment on it.
Then
there’s simple price-gouging.
There’s
the infamous case of TransDigm, a
Pentagon contractor that charged the government $4,361 for a metal pin that
should’ve cost $46 — and then refused to
share cost data. Congress recently asked TransDigm to repay some
of its misbegotten profits, but the Pentagon hasn’t cut off its business.
Somewhere
between price-gouging and incompetence lies the F-35 jet fighter, an
embarrassment the late Senator John McCain, a Pentagon booster, called “a scandal and a tragedy.”
Among
the most expensive weapons systems ever, the F-35 has numerous failings.
It’s spontaneously caught fire at
least three times — hardly the outcome you’d expect for the top Pentagon
contractor’s flagship program. The Pentagon has reduced its request for
new F-35s this year by about a third, but Congress may reject that too.
Most
serious of all, there’s the problem of U.S. weapons feeding conflicts in ways
the Pentagon didn’t foresee, but probably should have.
When
U.S. ground troops left Afghanistan, they left behind a huge array of military equipment,
from armored vehicles to aircraft, that could now be in Taliban hands. The U.S.
also left weapons in Iraq that fell into the hands of ISIS,
including guns and an anti-tank missile.
Even weapons we sold to
so-called allies like Saudi Arabia have ended up going to people affiliated
with groups like al Qaeda.
Military
weapons also end up on city streets at home. Over the years, civilian law
agencies have received guns, armored vehicles, and even grenade launchers from
the military, turning local police into
near-military organizations.
Records
also show that the Pentagon has lost hundreds of weapons which
may have been stolen, including grenade launchers and rocket launchers. Some of
these weapons have been used in crimes.
Taxpayers
shouldn’t be spending $900 apiece for these outcomes. My team at the Institute
for Policy Studies and others have demonstrated ways to cut up to
$350 billion per year from the Pentagon budget, including what we spend on
weapons contractors, without compromising our safety.
Even
better, we could then put some of that money elsewhere.
Compared
to the $900 for Pentagon contractors, the average taxpayer
contributed only about $27 to the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention, $171 to K-12 education, and barely $5 to renewable energy.
How
much more could we get if we invested even a fraction of what we spend on military
contractors for these dire needs?
Most Americans support shifting Pentagon funds to pay for domestic needs. Instead of making Americans fork over another $900 to corporate military contractors this year, Congress should put our dollars to better use.
Federal budgeting expert Lindsay
Koshgarian directs the National Priorities Project at the
Institute for Policy Studies. This op-ed was distributed by OtherWords.org.