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> The company announced in April it would cut 10% of its worldwide workforce of 160,000 by the end of 2020

With production halted for indefinite time for the 737 MAX, and no new orders for other planes due to covid that seems reasonable.

Still, even if planes don't do well right now and they had a few setbacks in their space business (Starliner delayed, and Boeing's moon lander proposal losing to competitors), they are still one of the largest defense contractors. They will be just fine.



Wars are a cost center. The US is eventually going to have to start redirecting tax revenue back to taxpayers, away from the military.


Says who? If history is any proof, I highly doubt this will happen.


U.S. governments spend almost $7 trillion annually. Federal defense spending is a bit over 10% of that. Does 90% not count as "redirecting tax revenue back to taxpayers?" At what point does it count?


Federal defense spending is a bit over 25% of the federal budget. Adding all US government spending together to make the point you're trying to make is highly misleading; any given tax payer likely only pays into one, maybe two state governments in any given year; cuts or spending in other state governments don't effect them. (I would entertain summing an average of local, state, and federal, to compare to, but not all.)


Defense spending is about 15% of the federal budget. Which makes sense, because defense one of the key areas entrusted to the federal government, as compared to state and local governments. Leaving out spending from the layers of government assigned primary responsibility for things like health and education is a deception intended to make defense spending look artificially large.

As to your other point: my calculation results in an average. Total spending on defense divided by total spending gives you the average spending on defense as a percentage of average spending at local plus state plus federal levels.


A draft would do wonders for the unskilled unemployment rate.


War produces jobs (both at the front line and in the entire defense sector), and producing jobs gets you reelected.


> With production halted for indefinite time for the 737 MAX

I just saw this: "Boeing resumes production of its troubled 737 Max airplane " https://www.theverge.com/2020/5/27/21272478/boeing-737-max-r...


> They will be just fine.

Except for the thousands of people that are now unemployed.


It's not so much with regards to whether boeing will be fine, it's more about how the general state of the economy as a whole.




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