In March 2007, the Bush
Administration submitted a five-year defense budget plan that
projected funding levels insufficient to provide a ready and modernized
fighting force.[1] On February 4, 2008, the Bush Administration released its fiscal year (FY) 2009 defense budget request.[2]
It would provide $541.1 billion--3.6 percent of gross domestic product
(GDP)-- in budget authority for national security, not including a $70
billion supplemental request to fund ongoing operations in the war
against Islamic terrorists.[3]
While the budget authority would increase by roughly $10 billion per
year until FY 2013, it would decline to less than 3.2 percent of GDP in
2013.
Fighting the
long war on terrorism will require a sustained commitment to fund
national defense programs. However, this is not the only national
security challenge that the U.S. military will face in the coming
decades. The U.S. needs to fund defense programs that will protect the
American people and U.S. friends and allies against the ongoing threats
from hostile states (e.g., Iran and North Korea) and looming threats
like the one posed by a hostile China. The FY 2009 budget request fails
to provide adequate funding for the basic building blocks in the core
defense program that are needed to protect the national security over
the long term.[4]
Congress
should ensure that it provides adequately for national security by
making a firm commitment to fund core defense programs at no less than
4 percent of GDP for the next 10 years. Senator Elizabeth Dole (R-NC)
and Representative Trent Franks (R-AZ) have introduced companion bills
(S.J. Res. 25 and H.J. Res. 67) that would make such a commitment. This
commitment would require Congress to add roughly $59 billion in budget
authority to the core defense budget in FY 2009 and a total of $532
billion over five years from FY 2009 through FY 2013. Congress can
achieve this outcome by amending the upcoming FY 2009 budget resolution.
The
core defense budget would go toward maintaining the structure of the
military, with a special emphasis on developing and deploying the next
generation of weapons and equipment that U.S. forces will need to fight
effectively in the future.[5] Protecting the lives and freedom of the American people is certainly worth 4 percent of national income.
The Administration's FY 2009 Defense Budget Request
The
Bush Administration's budget request for FY 2009 through FY 2013
continues to reflect a number of external and internal pressures on
the defense budget. The external pressures are posed by the rapid
projected growth in spending for Social Security, Medicare, and
Medicaid. If these entitlement programs are not reformed soon, they
will crowd out needed defense funding even though defense expenditures
as a percentage of GDP are already near a post-World War II low.
The
internal defense budget pressures are primarily the result of the high
cost of military operations and the increasing costs (both gross and
per capita) of compensating military personnel. While defense reform
efforts will alleviate some of the internal pressure on the defense
budget, these problems cannot ultimately be solved without a sustained
commitment by Congress to provide at least 4 percent of GDP for the
core defense programs.
In
the total federal budget, despite the ongoing war, the defense account
is continuing to lose ground to domestic mandatory spending programs
(e.g., Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid). The FY 2009 budget
request would continue this trend through the entire five-year budget
period.
External Pressures.
Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid spending has absorbed
ever-higher portions of the federal budget since the 1960s. In general
terms, this growth has come at the expense of the defense budget, but
this trend cannot continue indefinitely. Indeed, the United States is
facing a fiscal crisis because spending on Social Security, Medicare,
and Medicaid is forecast to grow faster than the overall economy
between 2005 and 2030.
Outlays for Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid currently total 8.7 percent of GDP.[6]
By comparison, the proposed defense benchmark (4 percent of GDP) is
less than half of what will be spent on the three major entitlement
programs in the foreseeable future.
The
implications for national defense are clear. Spending 4 percent of GDP
on national defense will quickly become impossible unless Congress
reforms Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid. Some Members of
Congress will likely argue that any reform of these programs is
tantamount to a draconian cut, but it is nothing of the sort. None of
the current entitlement reform proposals would cut spending on these
programs; they would only limit future growth.
Given
the size of the Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid programs,
reforming them will take time. Thus, Congress should start now.
Internal Pressures.
The military faces a variety of internal budget pressures ranging from
increasing personnel costs to the imbalance between the operations and
support accounts and the modernization account.
Military Retirement Benefits.
The success of the all-volunteer military depends on a well-designed
compensation package that attracts highly qualified people to military
service. It also depends on capping the spiraling increases in
manpower costs.
While
offering a generous compensation package will meet recruitment needs, a
well-designed package would focus on compensating military
servicemembers in ways that meet their needs most directly. This
tailored and more affordable approach would also ensure that taxpayers
get the best return on their investment in the military. Such a modern
military compensation package would recognize that military service
personnel, like their civilian counterparts, are part of a highly
mobile national labor force.
Above
all, the military compensation package that best supports the
all-volunteer force in the 21st century will be flexible. In general
terms, this flexibility is best achieved by favoring cash
compensation over in-kind and deferred benefits and designing the
remaining benefits around defined-contribution plans. Labor mobility
makes trying to design benefit packages to meet the unique needs of
every servicemember difficult and inefficient. Cash compensation,
however, would provide servicemembers more freedom to decide how to
use their benefits in ways that best meet their needs.
The
military should reform its current retirement system by adopting a new
structure in which the military contributes to each servicemember's
retirement account. The plan should also permit both the servicemember
and civilian government and private employers to make contributions.
Finally, the plan should allow the servicemember to bequeath the assets
to the servicemember's heirs upon his or her death without paying
estate or death taxes.[7]
Military Health Care.
A key problem with the U.S. health care system is that it often
precludes individuals from assuming at least some responsibility for
making decisions about their own care. The military health care system
takes this to an extreme by encouraging beneficiaries to treat health
care as a free good or service and consume it at whim rather than
according to need.
Structuring
the military health care system as a defined-contribution plan would
give its 9.2 million participants greater freedom of choice and more
control over their health care decisions.[8] Greater individual control would also impose more discipline with
respect to how servicemembers and their dependents use the system's
resources.
Pentagon
leaders should seek congressional authorization to move health care
coverage for dependents to the Federal Employees Health Benefits
(FEHB) system on terms consistent with the benefits available to
federal civilian employees. This would permit the military health care
system to focus on serving members of the military and meeting the
unique needs of military medicine.
For
future military retirees, the military should seek congressional
authorization to create a system of defined-contribution plans with
individual accounts for military members. The funds in these accounts
should be used to pay private health insurance premiums, deductibles,
and out-of-pocket medical expenses. As with the defined-contribution
retirement system, servicemembers, retirees, civilian government
employers, and private employers should be permitted to contribute to
these accounts. Eventually, all military dependents would be covered
under the FEHB system, and all new recruits would be in a
defined-contribution health care plan.[8]
Today's Needs Versus Tomorrow's Military.
In recent years, spending on today's forces has tended to crowd out
investment in tomorrow's forces. The funding for operations and support
activities (the operations and maintenance account plus the military
personnel account) has taken an increasing share of the overall
Department of Defense (DOD) budget. Conversely, spending on
modernization (the research and development account plus the
procurement account) has received an increasingly smaller share of the
DOD budget.
Specifically,
operations and support activities absorb roughly 60 percent of DOD
budget authority for the core program, not including the FY 2009
request for supplemental appropriations. Modernization activities
absorb only a little over 35 percent. By comparison, the two activities
approached parity in the 1980s, when operations and support absorbed
slightly more than modernization.
The
trend toward operations and support's receiving higher shares of the
core defense budget is driven largely by the increasing per capita
compensation cost for military personnel and the higher operational
tempo. During the 1990s, the gross cost of compensating America's
soldiers, sailors, airmen, and Marines was held in check by a 24
percent reduction in manpower. However, this pressure valve on manpower
costs is closing because the Bush Administration has proposed adding
92,000 soldiers and Marines to the force by 2012.[10] In fact, the planned increase in ground forces is ahead of schedule.[11]
Meanwhile,
per capita military compensation costs continue to rise, more than
doubling in the past 10 years. (See Chart 4.) A major contributing
factor is the cost of military health care. The FY 2009 defense budget
allocates $41.6 billion to providing health care benefits to military
personnel and their dependents.[12]
The
trend toward modernization's receiving smaller shares of the core
defense budget is largely the result of the Clinton Administration's
"procurement holiday" in the 1990s. The recovery from this unwise
choice is still incomplete. An enduring effect of the procurement
holiday is the imbalance between the procurement account (the account
for purchasing new weapons and equipment) and the account for
researching and developing new weapons and equipment technology.
In
the 1980s, procurement consumed more than 70 percent of the
modernization budget. The core defense budget for FY 2009 would still
leave procurement at only slightly more than 60 percent. (See Chart
6.) As a result, essential new weapons programs must be stretched out,
which increases unit costs, reduces the numbers of new weapons
available to the military, and prevents their timely delivery. For
example:
- Although Congress is seeking to remedy this problem, the Navy has been forced to reduce construction of Virginia-class submarines to one per year even though constructing two per year would reduce the unit cost to $2 billion per boat.[13]
- The
Air Force has been forced to scale back its purchasing of F-22 Raptor
tactical fighters dramatically. It is now slated to obtain just 183
F-22s despite its requirement for 381.[14]
- The Army has been forced to extend the production time for its Future Combat System by four years.[15]
Prerequisites for Sustained Defense Funding
Maintaining a healthy national defense program involves three prerequisites.
First,
Congress must make a sustained commitment to robust funding for
national defense. This is axiomatic. A robust defense program cannot be
maintained without sustained funding. Congress should therefore
establish a floor of 4 percent of GDP for national defense and firmly
resist all attempts to go below this floor for the next 10 years.
Second,
Congress must reform Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid. In the
long run, projected spending growth in these three entitlement
programs will make it impossible for Congress to provide at least 4
percent of GDP to national defense. Even in the short term,
entitlements will make allocating adequate resources to national
defense incrementally more difficult.
Third,
Congress must spend the defense budget wisely. This will require
rebalancing the internal defense accounts to meet long-term needs.
Specifically, Congress should:
- Increase
funding for the core defense programs if and when supplemental
appropriations to support ongoing contingency operations decline,
- Shift resources from the operations and support accounts to the modernization accounts, and
- Increase the share of the modernization accounts devoted to procurement.
What Congress Should Do
To
close the growing gap between defense needs and defense budget
authority, Congress should address the external and internal pressures
on the defense budget in five broad areas.
Providing the Necessary Resources.
Providing adequate funding for national defense starts with recognizing
that the Bush Administration's five-year defense budget request falls
short. The Administration's budget from FY 2009 through FY 2013 would
create a roughly $532 billion defense funding gap between budget
authority in the core defense program and the 4-percent-of-GDP
benchmark.
To remedy this problem, Congress should:
- Close this gap by adding the necessary budget authority to the five-year national defense account.
The relevant defense budget targets should be $600 billion for FY 2009
(not including the Bush Administration's $70 billion supplemental
appropriations request); $632 billion for FY 2010; $664 billion for FY
2011; $696 billion for FY 2012; and $728 billion for FY 2013. These
targets reflect the investments needed to sustain the core defense
program. They do not include supplemental appropriations to fund
ongoing operations in the war against Islamic terrorists.
- Make a clear commitment to sustain adequate defense funding beyond the five-year budget period.
Congress can do this by including report language that pledges Congress
to allocate at least 4 percent of GDP to the core national defense
program for the foreseeable future. Such a step would be a logical
follow-on to enacting either S.J. Res. 25 or H.J. Res. 67.
- Reform Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid.
Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid spending has absorbed
ever-higher portions of the federal budget since the 1960s. In general
terms, this growth has come at the expense of the defense budget. This
trend cannot continue indefinitely. Spending 4 percent of GDP on
national defense will quickly become impossible unless Congress reforms
Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid.
Funding Major Combat Operations Separately.
In wartime, the military always faces the challenge of not letting the
requirements for current operations undermine its ability to field
first-rate forces in the future. The Bush Administration, recognizing
this dilemma, has responded by using supplemental appropriations to
fund ongoing operations in the war against Islamic terrorists. This
has appropriately served the purpose of keeping these expenditures from
crowding out investments in the core defense program. If the costs of
current operations were incorporated into the annual defense budget,
the temptation to rob future military capabilities to fund current
operations would be overwhelming.
- Congress should continue to fund current contingency operations through supplemental appropriations.
The 4 percent benchmark is intended to protect the core defense program
and future defense capabilities. The spending goal therefore assumes
that supplemental appropriations will be in addition to the 4 percent
spent on the core program. This means that the roughly $532 billion
that Congress should add to the core defense program during the
five-year budget period would go exclusively to the annual defense
appropriations bill.
- Similarly, Congress and the Bush
Administration should resist the urge to fund elements of the core
defense program out of supplemental appropriations bills. Doing so would tie enduring defense programs to a funding source that could easily decline or disappear in the near future.
Rebalancing Military Compensation.
Absent reform, future increases in the per capita cost of military
compensation will crowd out needed spending on military modernization
because the overall size of the military is increasing. Ultimately,
rebalancing military compensation will require a number of significant
reforms. Ample evidence suggests that the current compensation system
is weighted too heavily in favor of in-kind and deferred compensation
over direct cash compensation.[16]
To begin rebalancing military compensation, Congress should:
- Reform military retirement benefits as outlined in various proposals to adjust the indexing of Social Security benefits.
If retirees receiving Social Security benefits are asked to accept less
generous indexing of those benefits, it is entirely appropriate to ask
the same of military retirees. This does not mean that a new indexing
formula for military retirement benefits must be identical to the one
applied to Social Security benefits. The military retiree community is
much smaller than the population of Social Security recipients and has
unique characteristics.
- Phase in a new defined-contribution retirement program over the next 10 years.
The military should change from its defined-benefit system to a
defined-contribution program in which the military would contribute to
each servicemember's retirement account.[17] The plan should also permit the servicemember and his or her civilian
government and private employers to make contributions. Finally, the
plan should contain an inter-generational element that allows the
servicemember to bequeath the assets in the account to the
servicemember's heirs upon his or her death without paying estate or
death taxes. After the 10-year transition period, all new military
recruits should be covered under this new retirement system.
- Move the military health care system away from a defined-benefit plan and toward a defined-contribution plan.
While the DOD touts its $41.6 billion system that provides benefits to
9.2 million people "as one of the best healthcare programs in the
world," this claim is far from obvious.[18]
The system is clearly one of the most generous and may be one of the
most inefficient. The military should seek congressional authorization
to move health care coverage for dependents to the Federal Employees
Health Benefits system on terms consistent with what is available to
federal civilian employees.
Increasing Military Modernization Funding.
The Bush Administration's FY 2009 budget request provides almost $184
billion to the modernization program in the core defense budget.[19] Modernization funding after FY 2009 is uncertain because the Bush
Administration did not provide budget authority figures for
modernization in the latter years of the budget period. This is a cause
for concern because of the $532 billion funding gap from FY 2009
through FY 2013 and the ongoing pleas from the service chiefs for more
modernization dollars.
- Congress should incrementally increase the Bush Administration's military modernization funding request for FY 2009
and thereby establish the foundation for future increases. Closing the
gap in the proposed five-year defense budget would leave sufficient
room to reach the $200 billion target for modernization in FY 2014.
This kind of sustained funding for modernization would provide the
military with the new weapons and equipment that it will need to be a
fully capable force a generation from today.
Increasing the Procurement Account's Share of Modernization Spending.
It is unclear whether or not the Bush Administration's FY 2009 budget
request for the core defense program would rebalance the internal
structure of the modernization program, because the request does not
specify funding levels for these accounts beyond FY 2009. The $104.2
billion in FY 2009 budget authority for procurement constitutes just
under 57 percent of the entire modernization program.
- Congress should incrementally increase the Bush Administration's procurement request for the core defense program
and resist all temptations to shift resources away from procurement to
research and development. It should sustain this rebalancing action in
future defense authorization and appropriation bills by ensuring that
procurement receives at least 60 percent of modernization budget.
Closing the budget gap for the core defense program in the latter years
of the budget period should provide sufficient room in the overall
budget to accommodate this goal.
Conclusion
The
United States was founded on the basis of individual liberty, and the
Constitution assigns to the federal government the primary
responsibility to "provide for the common defence."[20]
In this context, expending 4 percent of GDP in the defense of freedom
is entirely reasonable. Nevertheless, and despite the ongoing war
against terrorism, the federal government is now allocating a smaller
share of national income to defense than the average for the past four
decades.
Projected
growth in entitlement spending, not defense spending, is at the core of
the looming fiscal crisis facing the federal government. Current
defense expenditures--or even spending equivalent to 4 percent of
GDP--will not jeopardize either the health of the economy or the
prosperity of the American people, but a sustained commitment to
defense is necessary to sustain liberty.
Paying 4 percent for freedom is worth the price. Indeed, it is a bargain.
Baker Spring is F. M. Kirby Research Fellow in
National Security Policy in the Douglas and Sarah Allison Center for
Foreign Policy Studies, a division of the Kathryn and Shelby Cullom
Davis Institute for International Studies, at The Heritage Foundation.
ENDNOTES:
[1] Baker Spring, "Defense FY 2008 Budget Analysis: Four Percent for Freedom," Heritage Foundation Backgrounder No. 2012, March 5, 2007, p. 5, at www.heritage.org/Research/Budget/bg2012.cfm.
[2]Office of Management and Budget, Budget of the United States Government, Fiscal Year 2009, February 4, 2008, at www.whitehouse.gov/omb/budget/fy2009/pdf/budget.pdf (February 5, 2008).
[3] Office of Management and Budget, Historical Tables, Budget of the United States Government, Fiscal Year 2009, February 4, 2008, p. 90, at www.whitehouse.gov/omb/budget/fy2009/pdf/hist.pdf (February 5, 2008).
[4] Heritage calculation based on budget figures. Ibid., pp. 90 and 194.
[5] James
Jay Carafano, Baker Spring, and Mackenzie M. Eaglen, "Providing for the
Common Defense: What 10 Years of Progress Would Look Like," Heritage
Foundation Backgrounder No. 2108, February 19, 2008, at www.heritage.org/Research/NationalSecurity/bg2108.cfm.
[6] Office of Management and Budget, Historical Tables, p. 95.
[7] Carafano et al., "Providing for the Common Defense."
[8] James Jay Carafano, "A ‘Rucksack' for U.S. Military Personnel: Modernizing Military Compensation," Heritage Foundation WebMemo No. 1020, February 14, 2007, at www.heritage.org/Research/NationalSecurity/em1020.cfm.
[9] Carafano et al., "Providing for the Common Defense."
[10] U.S. Department of Defense, "President Bush's FY 2008 Defense Budget Submission," February 5, 2007, p. 2, at www.dod.gov/comptroller/defbudget/fy2008/2008_
Budget_Rollout_Attachment.pdf (February 26, 2007).
[11] U.S. Department of Defense, "Fiscal Year 2009 Budget Request," February 4, 2008, p. 11, at www.defenselink.mil/comptroller/budget.html (February 14, 2008).
[12] Ibid., p. 7.
[13] Baker Spring, "The Navy Needs to Close the Projected Gap in the Attack Submarine Fleet," Heritage Foundation WebMemo No. 1432, April 26, 2007, at www.heritage.org/Research/nationalsecurity/wm1432.cfm.
[14] The
Honorable Michael W. Wynne, "Strategic Initiatives," testimony before
the Committee on Armed Services, U.S. House of Representatives, October
24, 2007, and Defense Daily Network, "Bush Defense Budget Adequate Next
Year, But Then Falls $400 Billion Short," February 7, 2007, at www.defensedaily.com/VIP/dd/previous/dd0207.htm#A10 (February 9, 2007; subscription required).
[15] Mackenzie
M. Eaglen and Oliver L. Horn, "Future Combat Systems: A Congressional
Guide to Army Modernization," Heritage Foundation Backgrounder No. 2091, December 11, 2007, p. 8, at www.heritage.org/Research/NationalSecurity/upload/bg_2091.pdf.
[16] Congressional Budget Office, "Military Compensation: Balancing Cash and Noncash Benefits," Economic and Budget Issue Brief, January 16, 2004, at www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/49xx/doc4978/01-16-DoDCompensation.pdf (February 27, 2007), and Cindy Williams, "Paying Tomorrow's Military," Regulation, Vol. 29, No. 2 (Summer 2006), pp. 26-31, at www.cato.org/pubs/regulation/regv29n2/v29n2-1.pdf (February 27, 2007).
[17] Carafano et al., "Providing for the Common Defense."
[18] U.S. Department of Defense, "Fiscal Year 2009 Budget Request," p. 7.
[19] Ibid., p. 6.
[20] U.S. Constitution, Preamble.