An Insider’s Guide To Decoding the Pentagon Budget
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The Pentagon will release the details of its fiscal year 2013 budget on Monday.
If this year is like most in the past, some of the numbers, specifically those in the Pentagon’s press release, will be the wrong ones, and many of the important and fundamental issues will be distorted or ignored.
What follows is an effort to help people through the budget maze.
This year, the Defense Department has already released the top line numbers for 2013 and the next four years. But, as usual, they are very incomplete — even for just the top line. They are discretionary spending (annual appropriations) and do not include mandatory spending (entitlement programs) in the DoD budget. The latter amount is only a few billion dollars (peanuts in DoD budget terms), but that only starts the list of missing numbers.
To identify defense spending not in the Pentagon budget you need to know what the Department of Energy is spending for nuclear weapons, and what other agencies are spending for the National Defense Stockpile, the Selective Service and other activities that the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) calls “Defense-related activities” in the “National Defense” budget function.
You probably will not find these in the Pentagon’s press materials because they frequently aren’t there. [Eds. note: Nuclear weapons funding is usually contained in the energy appropriations and Energy Department budget because the Energy Department oversees most of that spending.] You can always find them at the OMB website, but you’ll need to know where, lest you get lost in the blizzard of tables and tomes that OMB releases on budget day.
At the OMB website, hunt down a document in the 2013 budget materials called “Analytical Perspectives;” then go to the “Supplemental Materials” and find a table titled “Policy Budget Authority and Outlays by Function, Category, and Program.” For the past two years, it’s been numbered Table 32-1. All the National Defense spending categories are there: DOD, DOE/Nuclear, the other cats and dogs, and both discretionary and mandatory spending are listed. They are right at the top of this long table; “National Defense,” or budget function 050, is the first one. Get those numbers straight, and for completeness and accuracy you will be heads and shoulders above the herd relying on just the Pentagon press release. There you can also find what the actual numbers were for 2011 and 2012, which, given the chaos in Congress, has not been easy to sort out recently.
Sometimes getting to table 32-1 in Analytical Perspectives can be tricky. For example for 2012, it is not listed in the Table of Contents to “Analytical Perspectives,” and the “Supplemental Materials” for the entire budget did not show it; you want the “Supplemental Materials” for “Analytical Perspectives.” Also, in the past, there have been other tables labeled 32-2 and other numbers. You don’t want them; you want “Policy Budget Authority and Outlays by Function, Category, and Program,” and it should, repeat should, be numbered 32-1. All this navigation advice should help, unless OMB has messed around with its formatting for 2013. Perplexing just to get an accurate set of numbers? Yup.
Next, you might want to assess national security spending not in the Pentagon or even the “National Defense” budget. In the same Table 32-1 you can find the budgets for Veterans Affairs (function 700) for some additional costs of past and current wars, and International Affairs (150) for military and economic aid and other State Department programs integral to the overall national security budget.
You can also find some spending for military retirement and DoD health care that is not in the National Defense budget function. They, however, are hard to tease out. You can find them if you word search in the .pdf version of Table 32-1 for “military retirement” and “DoD Retiree Health Care.” But they are a thicket of positive and negative numbers and tricky to net out to an accurate number. Perhaps it is best to simply be aware that they are there and that they can amount to low double digits of billions of dollars. Ask your favorite budget geek what they net out to. If he or she can sort it out in a day or two, get a new budget geek.
You still do not have all the defense-related numbers. You don’t have the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). Go back to the “Supplemental Materials” for “Analytical Perspectives.” There find “Appendix — Homeland Security Mission Funding by Agency and Budget Account” or Table 33-1. (At least that’s what they were labeled for 2012.) They should list the budget for DHS which is embedded in the various budget functions in Table 32-1. But be careful again; make sure you are not double counting any homeland security funding that shows up in both the National Defense budget function or 150 or 700 and the DHS budget. There should be tables that help you avoid the double counting.
Don’t look for any intelligence community spending; it’s a few score billions, but it’s not there; it’s embedded inside the 050 numbers. Don’t try to add anything for intel; if you do you will be double counting about $80 billion.
Perhaps you will decide to include the defense share of the national debt, specifically the share of interest of the debt that can be attributed to DOD, or National Defense, or all of the above for 2013. Find the total interest payment in function 900 and make your calculation.
Add it all up and you will get about $1 trillion, probably more; if you don’t get that high, you are missing something-something big.
Next you may want to make comparisons to show what direction defense spending is headed. Some will compare this defense budget to previous plans, showing a gigantic reduction. Some will compare it to last year’s spending, showing a tiny reduction-basically a flat budget. One comparison is mostly phony; one is not. (Hint: Last year I planned to win the lottery. I didn’t; ergo, my flat salary this year means a gigantic pay cut.)
If you want to go viral on phoniness, compare contemporary spending to historic defense spending using percent of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) as the measure. That way you can pretend the big recent increases are big decreases, and more huge increases should be oh-so affordable. Avoid this gimmick, especially those who use it. Apply that thought also to people who use the same-and other-gimmicks for non-defense spending.
Finished with the numbers? Why not address some of the long term, fundamentally important (and disturbing) trends in US defense spending for the last few decades. Two chapters in the anthology “The Pentagon Labyrinth: 10 Short Essays to Help You Through It” address such things. One is by Chuck Spinney, and I think it’s an important exposition. The other expands on the Pentagon’s habitual misdirection on numbers and briefly addresses the shrinking and aging that is continuing in our combat forces and their equipment. I wrote that one. I am sending you this piece with enough time before budget day on Monday to read those short essays and to conjure up your own take on what they mean for questions you should be asking Monday.
I hope this helps. Have fun on budget day.
Winslow T. Wheeler is director of the Straus Military Reform Project of the Center for Defense Information. A member of the AOL BOard of Contributors, he is also editor of the recently published “The Pentagon Labyrinth: 10 Short Essays to Help You Through It.”
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