The Three Trillion Dollar War: The True Cost of the Iraq Conflict
基本信息·出版社:W. W. Norton ·页码:192 页 ·出版日期:2008年03月 ·ISBN:0393067017 ·条形码:9780393067019 ·装帧:精装 ·正文语种:英语 · ...
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The Three Trillion Dollar War: The True Cost of the Iraq Conflict |
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基本信息·出版社:W. W. Norton
·页码:192 页
·出版日期:2008年03月
·ISBN:0393067017
·条形码:9780393067019
·装帧:精装
·正文语种:英语
·外文书名:耗资三万亿的战争: 伊拉克冲突的真正代价
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The true cost of the Iraq War is $3 trillionand countingrather than the $50 billion projected by the White House.Apart from its tragic human toll, the Iraq War will be staggeringly expensive in financial terms. This sobering study by Nobel Prize winner Joseph E. Stiglitz and Harvard professor Linda J. Bilmes casts a spotlight on expense items that have been hidden from the U.S. taxpayer, including not only big-ticket items like replacing military equipment (being used up at six times the peacetime rate) but also the cost of caring for thousands of wounded veteransfor the rest of their lives. Shifting to a global focus, the authors investigate the cost in lives and economic damage within Iraq and the region. Finally, with the chilling precision of an actuary, the authors measure what the U.S. taxpayer's money would have produced if instead it had been invested in the further growth of the U.S. economy. Written in language as simple as the details are disturbing, this book will forever change the way we think about the war.
作者简介 Winner of the 2001 Nobel Prize in Economics,
Joseph E. Stiglitz of Columbia University is the author of
Making Globalization Work and
Globalization and Its Discontents.
Linda J. Bilmes, a professor of public finance at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government, is a former assistant secretary for management and budget in the U.S. Department of Commerce.
专业书评 From Publishers Weekly Starred Review. Readers may be surprised to learn just how difficult it was for Nobel Prize-winning economist Stiglitz and Kennedy School of Government professor Bilmes to dig up the actual and projected costs of the Iraq War for this thorough piece of accounting. Using "emergency" funds to pay for most of the war, the authors show that the White House has kept even Congress and the Comptroller General from getting a clear idea on the war's true costs. Other expenses are simply overlooked, one of the largest of which is the $600 billion going toward current and future health care for veterans. These numbers reveal stark truths: improvements in battlefield medicine have prevented many deaths, but seven soldiers are injured for every one that dies (in WWII, this ratio was 1.6 to one). Figuring in macroeconomic costs and interest-the war has been funded with much borrowed money-the cost rises to $4.5 trillion; add Afghanistan, and the bill tops $7 trillion. This shocking expose, capped with 18 proposals for reform, is a must-read for anyone who wants to understand how the war was financed, as well as what it means for troops on the ground and the nation's future.
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