Distorted Priorities: Military Spending vs. People's Health
http://www.commondreams.org/view/2013/04/30-0
Distorted Priorities: Military Spending vs. People's Health
by César Chelala
Published on Tuesday, April 30, 2013 by Common Dreams
The latest report by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) shows that, considering some data uncertainties, the world military spending in 2012 dropped slightly (0.5 percent) when compared to 2011. It is the first decline in military spending since 1998. This could be a cause for celebration, except that it is still a perverse use of funds, which could be better diverted to improve peoples health and to promote peace.
According to SIPRIs estimates, world military spending in 2012 was $1,75 billion, of which $682 billion were spent by the US, $166 billion by China and $90.7 billion by Russia. There was a slight decline in spending by the United States, Australia, Canada,Japan, and Western and Central Europe. Reductions in those countries, however, were upset by increased spending in Asia, Eastern Europe, the Middle East, North Africa and Latin America.
In perspective, military expenditures were several hundred times the World Health Organization (WHO)s annual budget of $3,95 billion for the 2012-2013 period. Programs funded by the organization include: addressing the global AIDS pandemic; controlling resurgent tuberculosis; dealing with the global disease burden among women and children; addressing accident and trauma victims needs; responding to emergency and humanitarian crises, and developing effective health systems, among many other tasks.
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In the US, military spending fell 6 percent, mainly because of the withdrawal of US forces from Iraq and the diminished number of troops in Afghanistan.
In these cases, reduced spending on the additional war budget, also known as Overseas Contingency Operations, will probably continue falling if plans to end combat operations in Afghanistan in 2014 are fulfilled, and if the USdoesnt get involved in another major war. The US still spent more than the next 10 biggest military spenders in 2012.