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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Tab for Iraq war soars in studies’ broader count

Kevin G. Hall Knight Ridder

WASHINGTON – New academic research suggests that the war in Iraq could cost America up to $2 trillion.

Congress appropriated $357 billion from 2002 through the end of 2005 for the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq and related security issues, according to the nonpartisan Congressional Research Service.

But two research papers suggest that those numbers don’t tell the whole story. When nonbudget economic factors are added, the true cost to the U.S. economy over the next decade could be anywhere from $657 billion to $2 trillion for the Iraq war alone, these studies estimate.

That’s a lot of money; $2 trillion is enough to buy General Motors Corp. about 175 times at current stock prices.

The researchers include what they estimate continued military operations in Iraq will cost over the next decade – as much as $266 billion, according to the Congressional Budget Office.

Both papers also place a dollar value on a number of war-related consequences that are hard to measure. For instance, they try to gauge the lost productive capacity of soldiers killed in Iraq or National Guard members taken away from home for protracted tours of duty. As of Friday – according to icasualties.org, a Web site that tracks coalition casualties in Iraq from military news releases – 16,337 U.S. troops had been wounded in Iraq, more than 7,600 of them so seriously that they couldn’t return to duty within 72 hours.

The papers also try to gauge where today’s sky-high oil prices would be had there been no war and if Iraq had been allowed to produce more oil under U.N. supervision. They conclude that oil prices are 20 percent higher because of the war and the uncertainty about future supplies that it created.

The papers add the cost of interest on government debt run up by the war. They try to measure over time variables such as higher military-recruitment costs and the value of falling applications to military academies.

Attracting the most attention is a study co-authored by Joseph Stiglitz, a Nobel Prize-winning economist at Columbia University and former chief economist at the World Bank, who’s an outspoken critic of the war. In a 36-page paper released this week, Stiglitz and Harvard University lecturer Linda Bilmes argue that the total economic costs of the war dwarf government spending on it.

“Even taking a conservative approach, we have been surprised at how large they are,” the two wrote. “We can state, with some degree of confidence, that they exceed a trillion dollars.”

The total could rise to $2 trillion under the less conservative of Stiglitz’s two models.

Government agencies often conduct such cost analyses when weighing policy options, but the Bush administration did no such analysis before it decided to invade Iraq. Before the March 2003 invasion, the Bush administration didn’t offer an official estimate for what the war might cost. Lawrence Lindsey, the director of the White House’s National Economic Council, was shown the door after suggesting that it could cost $100 billion to $200 billion. Events have proved that estimate low. Other officials said they believed that increased sales of Iraqi oil would pay for much of the cost of rebuilding the country.

Maybe they should have thought harder, Scott Wallsten suggested. He’s a scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, a conservative research center, who published a war-costs analysis last September that was just updated. Wallsten concludes that the cost of the Iraq war to the U.S. economy, beyond spending by Congress, will exceed $300 billion.

“The point of the paper wasn’t to take a position on the war. I am hoping to create a framework for evaluation,” Wallsten said in an interview.

The White House bristled at that.

“The president doesn’t approach defending America as an accountant,” said spokesman Trent Duffy, adding that there are economic benefits from preventing terrorism.