Does Government Military Spending “Fund” Shareholder Dividends, Buybacks, and Concentrated Wealth?

Short answer: yeah. The long answer is . . . longer.

– by Steve Roth

There are a lot of pathways and mechanisms in the US and worldwide that deliver wealth to assetholders, and that have perennially concentrated that wealth (hence power) into the hands of dynasties over millennia — notably over recent decades in the US.

Semler’s eye-catching claim is that $109 billion (~11%) of those payments to contractors won’t/don’t fund actual military spending, but will instead go to owners/shareholders of the corporate military contractors in dividends and share buybacks.

Now, $109B is only a minute fraction of the $13T in assets currently held by the top-10% wealthholders (who since 2020 have received ~10% average annual return on their assets). But as I said up top, this is just one pathway/mechanism; there are innumerable others. And it’s just one year; wealth accumulates across generations and dynasties; there’s nothing more magical than compounding interest.

For those that are interested, here’s Semler’s premise and arithmetic in simple form:

  1. Dividends and buybacks come out of corporate revenues — a reasonable understanding in accounting terms. The disbursals have to come from some flow (or stock).
  2. 67% of the top-four military contractors’ revenues come from government spending. So assume that 67% of their dividends/buybacks ($154T total) do as well: voila, $103B.

    How did past societies end their disintegrative periods? A critical step is reversing the root cause of crisis—the perverse wealth pump that takes from the common people and gives to the elites.