The (Hidden) Costs of the Afghanistan War
The human costs of the Afghan War are well known. Its inflationary costs are less understood
The somber photos and videos that came out of Afghanistan this year led many to wonder whether the 20-year conflict was worth the cost.
This horrific image may become the iconic picture of the Trump-Biden withdrawal from Afghanistan. It appears the situation in Kabul remains desperate with US forces in harm’s way. Let’s remember the many Americans bravely doing their jobs under the worst of circumstances. pic.twitter.com/avDwKpwhi2
— John Bolton (@AmbJohnBolton) August 16, 2021
According to the Associated Press, through April, more than 172,000 people (American and otherwise) have died in the course of the War in Afghanistan. The estimated amount of direct Afghanistan and Iraq war costs that the United States has debt-financed: is estimated at more than $2 trillion.
The estimated principal and interest owed by 2050: up to $6.5 trillion.
This war, as with much of government spending, isn’t paid by money the government has. The money is borrowed into existence.
The financial costs of debt-financed spending by today’s decision makers will burden future generations. The pain of printing trillions of unbacked bills isn’t felt immediately, so the gravity of the action is subtle, but the end result is unavoidable.
When Congress granted then-President George W. Bush the authority to use all “necessary and appropriate force” against those involved with the 9/11 a week after the attacks, the federal government went down a course set for monetary ruin.
One dollar in 2001 had the purchasing power of $1.54 today. The dollar had an average inflation rate of 2.19 percent per year between 2001 and today, producing a cumulative price increase of 54.15 percent.
That means that today’s prices are 1.54 times higher than average prices in 2001, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ Consumer Price Index, a measure that notoriously understates real-world inflation as a result of deploying clever hedonic adjustments, geometric weighting, and substitutions that tend to paint a rosier picture.
Said another way, a dollar today buys no more than 65 percent of what it could buy in 2001. And by other measures besides the flawed Consumer Price Index (CPI), it buys even less.
The government’s borrowing has accelerated rapidly to the upside since the COVID lockdowns and emergency “stimulus” efforts. That portends potentially much higher rates of inflation ahead.
Earlier this month, Reuters reported that “world food prices [climbed] in November, [staying] at 10-year peak.”
Substituting chicken breast for Angus beef… or the less expensive chicken thigh for chicken breast might be an innocuous sacrifice, but what if you are now having trouble affording chicken at all?
Inflation harms the poorest among us. Individuals with means can invest in assets that protect against dollar devaluation. Gold and silver, real estate, even the stock market.
But what about wage earners? Senior citizens on fixed income? Those trying to save a little extra for the future?
Those most harmed by the increased costs are those already struggling to afford these things. Dollar menus at fast food restaurants have vanished while the costs of homes, food, cars, college tuition, and medicine have soared.
One of sound money’s most central features is that it restricts government spending to only what can be extracted from the populace through taxation. A print-and-spend approach to monetary policy enables wasteful and fruitless government expenditures, such as, for example, unpopular decades-long wars.
For 20 years, Americans fought a war that cost thousands of lives and trillions of dollars. Many are left questioning whether the cost of this war was worth it.
There are many costs that are apparent, but the sapping away of the dollar’s purchasing power—and the theft of wealth from all of those who hold it – is one of the greatest costs of all.
This piece was oignially posted on FEE.org, read the original here.