The Myth of Wartime Prosperity

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Whenever an earthquake or a tornado causes great damage, some reporter somewhere claims that on net it will boost the local economy since the rebuilding effort will create jobs and increase business for local merchants. Similarly, whenever a war breaks out, the same reporter can be counted on to emphasize the economic stimulus it allegedly confers.

As if on cue, in May the Washington Post published an article headlined “Across America, War Means Jobs.” Although it acknowledged that the matter wasn’t quite so simple, the article nevertheless quoted a great many people who asserted that war was a boon for the economy. “If it wasn’t for [Defense Department] contracting,” said Brian Smith of Columbia Sewing Company, “we would not be here, and 200 people would be out of a job.” Roanoke Mayor Betty Slay Ziglar was thrilled: “These people have grown up sewing in textile plants, and there are so few now. They were desperate to have jobs, and it’s going to expand again. I’m so grateful.” “The economy is always helped by war,” appliance salesman Gary Gayer told the Post. “That’s just a fact.”

It is clear enough that war stimulates certain sectors of the economy. But it is logically and economically unjustified to equate that stimulus with prosperity for the American people as a whole. Ludwig von Mises summed up the correct position when he observed, “War prosperity is like the prosperity that an earthquake or a plague brings.”

Frédéric Bastiat exposed the “broken window” fallacy in the mid-nineteenth century. A shop window broken by a man’s “incorrigible son” is said to benefit the economy, since the company that fixes the window enjoys a “stimulus,” which in turn is passed along to those with whom the window company does business. What this analysis overlooks is that the man with the broken window would have spent his money on other things if he had not needed to buy new glass. The “stimulus” that would have been bestowed on, say, the picture-frame store, where he could have spent his money, now never occurs because he had to replace his window. Had the window not been broken, the shopkeeper would have had a window and a frame. Now he has only a window.

The repair of the window is what is seen, and focusing on it leads poor logicians to conclude that the breakage was actually a boon. The lack of a picture frame is not seen, but is no less a consequence of the unfortunate incident.

The same kind of analysis can be fruitfully applied to war. The jobs created for the production of weapons and other military equipment, as well as the jobs in the armed forces, are paid for by taxing the private economy. Thus financing wartime activities diminishes private incomes—that is, the ability of Americans to buy the goods they need. And because people and capital goods are now producing war-related items and services, fewer are available to produce goods for consumer needs. In short, Americans have less money with which to buy fewer goods. How can this be anything other than economic retrogression?

There are countless other deleterious effects as well. In extreme cases, government rations certain crucial goods to ensure adequate supplies for the military. No definition of prosperity includes restricting the civilian population’s ability to acquire goods. But even when outright rationing is not undertaken, government purchases nevertheless distort the economy. For example, large purchases of steel will lead to price increases, making it more difficult for private businesses that use steel to meet their competition in a global market. If the higher prices attract new steel producers, this new production comes at the cost of abandoning other industries, thus further skewing the economy in favor of the government’s preferences over those of the consumer.

Some will object that military equipment is fundamentally different from other goods the government might buy, since it is necessary to protect the population against foreign enemies. But even if we assume this to be true, it is still the case that war itself does not create prosperity. Buried in the Post article was the amazing statistic that in real terms the cost of the Iraq war will surpass the American share of World War I. To put it mildly, that is a substantial drain on the private economy.

World War II and American Prosperity

Part of the reason that the prosperity-through-war myth persists is that most people have been taught that World War II lifted the United States out of the Great Depression and ushered in a period of unprecedented affluence. But the myth is no more valid for that conflict than for any other.

Historians make much of the substantial production and employment statistics compiled during World War II and triumphantly point to its great economic “stimulus.” But most of this increase was due to the construction of armaments and military equipment, and payments to military personnel. This production was not geared toward producing things that ordinary people needed. From a purely economic point of view, the war made consumers worse off by diverting capital and other resources away from civilian production and toward the production of goods that no consumer would wish to purchase. Between 1943 and 1945, some two-fifths of the people who could work—including members of the armed forces, civilian employees of the armed forces, people who worked in the military-supply industries, and the unemployed—were not producing consumer goods or capital goods geared toward the production of consumer goods. That was not all, of course: the tax money from the remaining three-fifths went to fund military production and activities. All of this amounted to a dramatic loss of material wealth.*

Unemployment did virtually disappear. But it did so primarily because 11 million people were added to the armed forces, mostly by conscription. As Robert Higgs explains, “During the war the government pulled the equivalent of 22 percent of the prewar labor force into the armed forces. Voilà, the unemployment rate dropped to a very low level. No one needs a macroeconomic model to understand this event.”

In the unhampered market, jobs are never in short supply. Since human wants are unlimited, more labor is always needed to produce more goods. The sick economy of the New Deal, however, could address the unemployment problem only by conscripting over a fifth of the labor force into the military.

Meanwhile, the average work week in manufacturing increased by seven hours between 1940 and 1944, and by a full 50 percent in bituminous coal mining. And because of the demands of wartime, people found it more difficult, and sometimes even impossible, to acquire the goods they needed. No one could buy a new car, house, or major appliance, since the government had forbidden their production entirely. A great many other goods were either unavailable or difficult to obtain, from chocolate bars and sugar to meat, gasoline, and rubber tires.

As economist George Reisman writes in Capitalism, “People believed they were prosperous in World War II because they were piling up large amounts of unspendable income—in the form of paper money and government bonds. They confused this accumulation of paper assets with real wealth. Incredibly, most economic statisticians and historians make the same error when they measure the standard of living of World War II by the largely unspendable ‘national income’ of the period.”

Common sense is right after all: death and destruction do not lead to prosperity. That should be obvious. But as George Orwell once said, “We have now sunk to a depth at which restatement of the obvious is the first duty of intelligent men.”


Thomas Woods holds a Ph.D. in history from Columbia University. He recently was named the 2004 winner of the O.P. Alford III Prize for Libertarian Scholarship.

There Are 4 Responses So Far. »

  1. Most people have an intuitive understanding of economics that belies the certainty of objective arguments. The material ingredients of a healthy marketplace – talent and resources – are ever present in all but the smallest and most isolated economies. The third ingredient, trust, is often in short supply. While it is wrong to use war for the purpose of ending economic woes, war does create trust, most notably in loyalty between soldiers. This trust is not merely personal: it becomes a contract, progressively formalized, between society and citizenry. The message: Fight for us, and we will give you education, employment and help with building your household. It doesn’t matter whether or not World War II ended the Great Depression; what matters is that those who survived the war demanded and got prosperity. Human wants may be unlimited, but the rate of expenditures depends greatly on economic conditions: In hard times broken windows go unfixed. We don’t need war to overcome the Recession of 2008, but we do need trust. Trust requires something subjective in pursuit of something objective: a shared desire to overcome a challenge. War works simply because it terrifies almost everyone. Environmentalism might work if it can attract people from across the political spectrum. Prosperity alone cannot work: Money is a tool, not the wellspring of unity.

  2. Mr. Woods has it right. The War = prosperity concept doesn\’t work. About the only exception to this is if you sack the nation and cart off its wealth but even that is a short term injection of wealth.

    The reason WWII ended the Great Depression is it both figuratively and literally destroyed the bad debt created by the Versailles treaty. The pre-war loans didn\’t have any support besides the failing Mark so once it was completely devalued the loans were worthless. Worthless loans = economic disaster. If you want proof, we just did the same thing with housing loans.

    After the war new loans were issued to help Europe rebuild and once this happened they became partners in trade rather than enemies in war. These loans had the support of real property, expanding business, and growing economies so they were paid off. In addition to this the newly forged stability resulted in economic prosperity for everyone involved.

    On a grizzlier note the loss of 50 to 80 million men had a massive impact on global unemployment. The global population in 1940 was around 2 billion so at least 2.5% of the planet suddenly dropped dead. To borrow from Dickens, that removed quite a bit of the “surplus population.”

  3. It was not the war that ended the Great Depression. The Great Depression didn’t end until later in the 1940’s and did so only when the “trust” Tony referred to in his comments was restored. This trust was violated by FDR with the numerous changes in the “rules of the game” creating considerable “regime uncertainty” in the minds of investors. This trust wasn’t restored until FDR’s New Deal bureaucrats were replaced by the more trustworthy pro-business leaders,a shift which continued after FDR’s death. It is not the trust created by collective efforts such as war and the environmental movement that create prosperity but rather the trust created by the sanctity of individual property rights. When we see the repeated violation of these rights by politicians in the current environment the prospects for a quick economic recovery seem dim.

  4. Aron,

    I think it is important to look at what caused the trust to be undermined in the first place. The “Roaring 20’s” was financed by paper interest on war debt rather than real money. When the value of the Mark was undermined the value of the loans dropped until they were worthless. Banks failed. People lost their life savings. The economy tanked. This is what undermined the trust.

    The same thing is true for home and equity loans in the current market. People didn’t pay the loans so they were worthless. Banks failed but were propped up. The economy tanked but not as badly.

    Offering that the Depression was ended by the WWII might suggest we need a war to end our current economic situation and that’s obviously not true. The economy will rebound regardless of if we blow things up or not. We’ve been blowing things up in Iraq for more than a decade and that didn’t prevent the current economic down turn. In fact, it probably contributed to it. So I don’t think war is good for the economy.

    On the other hand it can’t be denied that the US made significant amounts of money rebuilding Europe and Asia. This influx of post war capital from rebuilding loans replaced the pre-Depression reparations loans to Germany. Due to the lessons learned from the Depression these loans were more secure. As these proved to be more reliable confidence grew fostering the “trust.”

    In addition to this there were technological advances driven by the war that resulted in entrepreneurial investment in airlines and other industries that had limited availability or didn’t exist at all prior to the war. I would agree that many of these advances probably would have occurred, in time, but if necessity is the mother of invention then war is the mother of all necessities. For instance it is almost certain that nuclear energy would not have received a fraction of the attention and financing that it received if the Allies hadn’t been afraid the Axis was going to build the atomic bomb first.

    This is not to say the “War ended the Depression” but they are chronologically linked and it did set up favorable investment situations that probably would not have existed if it hadn’t happened.

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