The Arms Production Dilemma: Contraction and Restraint in the World Combat Aircraft Industry

Front Cover
Randall Forsberg
MIT Press, 1994 - Business & Economics - 300 pages

The studies show how military strategy, planned forces, and the age of systems in the current inventory affect the domestic demand for new production; how the recent drop in domestic demand affects arms industries; and the extent to which governments and firms in the arms-producing nations are turning to exports to sustain the industries.

In the shrinking arms market of the post-Cold War era, countries with advanced arms industries face difficult choices concerning force size, arms production, arms export, and defense industrial capacity. This book explores the links among these issues through a detailed study of the combat aircraft industries in the United States, Russia, Britain, France, Germany, Italy, and Sweden--the seven countries that develop, produce, and export all of the world's technologically advanced weapon systems. The studies show how military strategy, planned forces, and the age of systems in the current inventory affect the domestic demand for new production; how the recent drop in domestic demand affects arms industries; and the extent to which governments and firms in the arms-producing nations are turning to exports to sustain the industries. Stunning changes in Russia's combat aircraft forces, industry, and strategy are detailed here for the first time, as are expected future Russian combat aircraft exports to China. Newly compiled data also show that in the United States and Russia and globally, arms production for export will exceed production for domestic use for the first time in history, starting in 1995. Arms production is thus increasingly dominated by commercial rather than security interests. Ultimately at issue is whether governments will exploit the opportunity offered by the dramatic post-Cold War contraction of the world arms market to reduce their armed forces and constrain international arms trade while shrinking the arms industry--or keep pushing arms exports that generate new threats and justify larger armed forces, more arms production, and bigger arms industries.

 

Contents

INTRODUCTION
1
Russian Air Strategy and Combat Aircraft
17
The Conversion of the Russian Military
61
Russian Aerospace Exports
87
U S Airpower and Aerospace Industries
111
The British Push for the Eurofighter 2000
139
GermanyThe Reluctant Eurofighter
177
The Rafale and French MilitaryIndustrial
193
The Gripen and Swedens Evolving Defense
217
SECONDARY ARMS PRODUCERS
239
GLOBAL PROSPECTS
269
Appendix
291
Copyright

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