Mobilization Analysis and Industrial Policy: Dilemmas and Tradeoffs,

Abstract

The first tradeofff I want to call your attention to is that between the economy's efficient performance in peacetime and its efficient performance in crisis mobilization. Second, and indirectly related to the first. is the tradeoff between the government's efficient performance in peacetime and in wartime or in crisis mobilization. The third point concerns a conjecture about the relationship between our increased ability to deter a large, protracted conventional conflict as a result of an improved mobilization base, and, paradoxically, the Soviet Union's possibly increased ability to impose economic costs upon us as a result of the same U.S. mobilization base. My final point is the suggestion that it may be useful to analyze tradeoffs that exist among three factors: first, strategic warning and national command capabilities; second, WRM stocks (War Reserve Materiel); and third; industrial mobilization capabilities. The second and third factors are familiar enough, but they are not generally linked with the first.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Dec 01, 1983
Accession Number
ADA152947

Entities

People

  • C. Wolf Jr.

Organizations

  • RAND Corporation

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Engineered Resilient Systems

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • California
  • Conventional Warfare
  • Corporations
  • Economic Analysis
  • Economic Systems
  • Governments
  • Industrial Mobilization
  • Intervals
  • Intervention
  • Market Economy
  • Mobilization
  • Peacetime
  • Public Policy
  • Strategic Warning
  • United States
  • Ussr
  • War

Readers

  • Economics
  • Industrial Economics
  • Logistics and Supply Chain Management.