Excerpt from Chapter 8 of A PEOPLEÕS HISTORY OF SCIENCE

[N.B.: Source notes have been omitted. For sources of quotations, see the book.]

 

. . . the Cold War provided the rationale for the U.S. governmentÕs rapidly growing role in science after the war. Federal spending on academic research and development rose from less than $150 million in 1953 to almost $10 billion in 1990.

But the governmental stewardship of science did not diminish with the end of the Cold War; the much-anticipated Òpeace dividendÓ never materialized. [Footnote 1] The stated reason that federal R&D budgets continued to increase year by year was the need to remain economically competitive with rival industrial nations, but the permanent war economy in the United States is difficult to disguise. The portion of the R&D budget allocated to what is euphemistically called ÒdefenseÓ amounted to almost exactly half of the total of $75.4 billion in fiscal 2000. Another $8.4 billion went for space research officially categorized as civilian but ultimately motivated by considerations of its potential military applications. In the same spirit, Òthe Department of Energy, descended from the Manhattan Project, provides over $2 billion annually for physics, the nuclear sciences, and other disciplines in science and engineering.Ó

 

KEYNES AND THE PERMANENT CRISIS OF OVERPRODUCTION

Because the form, content, and direction of science have been so strongly influenced by immense expenditures on war-related research, knowing why those expenditures are made is essential to understanding the place of science in contemporary America. It certainly has nothing to do with preparedness to combat a genuine military threat. When the bugaboo of Òinternational communismÓ evaporated with the collapse of the Soviet Union, a new specious justification for maintaining the several-hundred-billion-dollar war budgetÑÒinternational terrorismÓÑwas quickly conjured up. Random acts of terrorism pose a real (if statistically miniscule) threat to some urban populations, but to think that the architects of American imperialism really fear raggedy groups of Islamic radicals is equivalent to belief in the bogeyman. An observation by Dr. Helen Caldicott renders the deceit apparent: the U.S. Department of Energy is currently engaged in Òa massive scientific undertaking costing 5 to 6 billion dollars annually for the next ten to fifteen years, to design, test, and develop new nuclear weapons,Ó but Òthe largest nuclear stockpile in the world can accomplish little in the face of terrorists armed with box cutters.Ó

Nor is the war spending primarily motivated by a desire for weapons for offensive purposes. Most of all, it is necessary to keep the wheels of the American economy from rapidly grinding to a halt. The Great Depression of the 1930s revealed that the capitalist system, left to its own devices, has become so productive that it is no longer capable of generating enough purchasing power to absorb all the products with which it continuously floods the market. John Maynard Keynes explained to Franklin Roosevelt that to create enough Òaggregate demandÓ to keep the economy from freezing up, governments would henceforth have to create new purchasing power (i.e., new jobs) by engaging in massive deficit spending. [Footnote 2]

It would not suffice to merely Òprime the pumpÓ and then step back to allow the invisible hand of supply and demand to reestablish economic equilibrium. Government deficit spending was destined to become a permanent condition, with deficits continuously increasing. When questioned as to what would happen Òin the long runÓ as governments continued endlessly piling up mountains of debt, KeynesÕs famous riposte was, ÒIn the long run we are all dead.Ó [Footnote 3]

Not all deficit spending, it was discovered, is equally effective in preventing economic gridlock. Using government money to produce useful things such as schools or housing or highways does not help because it competes with private capital, which puts downward pressure on the number of jobs in the private sector and on the purchasing power they represent. The most effective of RooseveltÕs public works programs were those that produced nothing, most notoriously exemplified by legions of workers with shovels digging holes and then filling them back in again. [Footnote 4] As useless as such activity would seem to be, it gave workers paychecks that allowed them to buy some of the surplus production without having them create more surplus products. But the apparent wastefulness was an insult to reason, and it was impossible in the American political context to explain that the paradox was an inescapable feature of the capitalist economic system.

In any event, the deficit spending represented by RooseveltÕs public works programs was far from adequate to lift the American economy out of the mire. What ended the Great Depression was the truly massive military expenditure in the run-up to World War II.

After the war the rebuilding of Europe through the Marshall Plan eased the problem of insufficient aggregate demand, but that was a temporary fix. To prevent the world economy from once again lapsing into a terminal crisis of overproduction, governments would have to continuously spend enormous amounts on utterly useless productionÑindustrial output that would not house, feed, clothe, or otherwise benefit anybody in any way. But how could that be justified? The answer was found in weapons systems deemed necessary (wink, wink) for national security. Thus was born the ever-increasing ÒdefenseÓ budget, which has been the primary source of science funding ever since. It is sad to have to conclude that the major portion of Big ScienceÕs attention has been and is still being directed toward a vast exercise in deliberate waste.

The most egregious example of Big ScienceÕs planned wastefulness is SDI, the Strategic Defense Initiative, popularly known as ÒStar Wars.Ó The Reagan administrationÕs 1983 announcement of the intention to create a ÒshieldÓ in outer space that could protect the United States from incoming missiles raised the prospect of massive federal investment in scientific research. The immense contracts at stake were a powerful inducement to corporate and university laboratories, but the rise of significant opposition to the program on the part of scientists was an unexpected development.

The Union of Concerned Scientists produced a detailed report entitled The Fallacy of Star Wars. ÒNationwide, some 2,300 university researchers were doing the unthinkable, pledging they would not apply for or accept the bountiful funds that the Strategic Defense Initiative Organization wished to infuse into academic research.Ó But the negative findings of independent scientists were no match for the power of government money. SDI officials Òreported over 3,000 applications for funds from university scientists willing to do business with the missile-defense program.Ó

And so SDI flourished and a great deal of junk science was paid for and produced over many years in the effort to provide it with credibility. After Reagan and the first President Bush, the Clinton administration changed the programÕs name to the Ballistic Missile Defense Organization, but continued to fund it. ÒFrom the birth of Star Wars, in 1984, to the end of the century, missile defense consumed over $60 billion. The enormous expenditures,Ó however, Òhave produced negligible results.Ó Bush the Younger has continued down the path toward the militarization of space; his administrationÕs National Missile Defense program has been aptly nicknamed ÒSon of Star Wars.Ó

 

FOOTNOTES:

 

 

1. Between 1990 and 2000 the total R&D budget rose steadily from $63.8 billion to $75.4 billion.

 

2. For an early example of KeynesÕ advice to Roosevelt, see his ÒOpen Letter to President RooseveltÓ (1933).

 

3. KeynesÕ first use of this phrase actually preceded the Great Depression (in his 1923 Tract on Monetary Reform), but he utilized it as an all-purpose response to deflect any and all questions concerning the Òlong run.Ó

 

4. Keynes, in his most important work, alluded to the benefits of this kind of apparently absurd economic activity: ÒIf the Treasury were to fill old bottles with banknotes, bury them at suitable depths in disused coalmines which are then filled up to the surface with town rubbish, and leave it to private enterprise . . . to dig the notes up again . . . the real income of the community, and its capital wealth also, would probably become a good deal larger than it is.Ó Keynes, The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money, chapter 10, section 6.