Bigger Budgets = Fewer Planes

Bigger Budgets = Fewer Planes

The cost to build jet aircraft has increased in recent decades on the order of 7 to 12 percent, twice the rate of inflation, according to a new RAND study. Aircraft costs are so high that the Pentagon is buying fewer aircraft now in the peak years of defense spending than it during the “trough” years of a few decades ago.

In the lean defense spending year of 1975, the Pentagon bought 193 fighter aircraft. The Reagan defense buildup increased the number of fighters bought to 300 by 1985. The “peace dividend” years saw fighter procurement drop to 24 in 1995. Yet, in 2005, with soaring defense budgets, the Air Force and Navy together bought 66 fighters. “The escalating cost of aircraft and the downward cycle of procurement rates raises issues about the number of aircraft DOD will ultimately be able to procure and operate,” RAND says.

While labor costs per unit of aircraft have decreased as more production is outsourced, but that decline has been offset by a rise in material costs, particularly specialty metals. In 1970, material and equipment made up 45 percent of aircraft costs, now they make up 62 percent of total costs. Rising global demand for titanium, particularly from China, referred to as the “golf club” effect, is causing grief among aircraft manufacturers concerned about scarcity effects on manufacturing costs and schedules.

But the main culprit for escalating aircraft costs, RAND says, is that buyers have chosen quality over quantity and aided by a technological revolution in design tools, sophisticated electronic warfare systems and higher thrust jet engines, demand ever greater performance out of increasingly complex airframes. The front line F-16 fighter of the 1970s had 15 subsystems and 40 percent of its functions managed by computer software. The F-35 has 130 subsystems and more than 90 percent of its functions managed by software. Adding stealth to airframes is costly in both the CAD/CAM design, milling and fabrication and the use of radar-absorbing materials.

One of the problems the RAND researchers highlight is that the contraction and consolidation of the defense industrial base during the 1990s has left only two fighter/attack aircraft manufacturers. Trying to impose cost controls through competition is no longer really an option. Of greater concern is the ability of such a small manufacturing base to turn out innovative new designs. “With the F-35, F-22A and F/A-18E/F as the only high technology aircraft currently in production for the U.S. military, and no new design for manned aircraft on the horizon, the United States must remain concerned about who will design its next-generation aircraft,” the report says.

Opening up fighter manufacture to foreign competition would obviously help, RAND notes, but that’s an option neither Congress nor DOD will find acceptable. Fighter aircraft in Air Force and Navy inventories have no peer in the militaries around the world, yet manufacturers continue to push the technological and capability edge. That technological superiority does come at considerable unit cost, something RAND thought they should point out to the services.

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“That technological superiority does come at considerable unit cost, something RAND thought they should point out to the services.”

Stating the obvious. The bean counter writing that report should be required to “ride along” on the first available “hot” combat mission to see how his attitude changes about money and tech vs. the life of the aircrew.

They should subtitle this study “Duh!”

Not just the life of the aircrew, which is obviously priceless, but a higher likelihood of a completed mission which can save even more lives on the ground and in the air. I would prefer RAND to publish a study on mission effectiveness versus dollars spent for an airframe and see if we are heading in the right direction.

Well, the way I look at it is,when our nation was under attack,the jets did not scramble,so why pay out a bunch of money for something they don’t use when the home land is under attack,we have just been going to solvern nations and bombing hell out of them. Think about it,I do and have for 7 years.

The success of the Georgian air defenses against the Russian Air Force is why the US Air Force is correct to want stealth. Stealth is expensive, but mission failure or loss of control of the battlespace can be even more expensive. The US Navy can send in it’s F-18E/F as a decoy for the F-35’s when they are available.

AE– that study would be tough to publish because the f-22 and f-35 have never flown a combat mission. For current wars, the f-22 is useless, though it might be of some use if we ever came to blows with Russia, China, or the EU. On the other hand, we’d probably be better off filling the skys with f-15s, 16s, and 18s. As for the f-35, its too fast to be an effective air to ground platform and its not a top tier air to air fighter.

For the missions we’re running now and in the forseable future A-10s would be the most effective and most cost-effective platform you could come up with.

Bambooviper: The reasons that there was no immediate air cover during 9/11 was that the budget for air defense over the US was hammered by the previous Clinton administration. Ever since the Berlin Wall fell, politicians did not see the merit of having a large air defense force protecting US Airspace. As a result of these budget cuts (to Active, Reserve, & Guard) the closest air defense unit to NYC was on Cape Cod, MA and the closest unit to Wash DC was Langley AFB in VA.

Iceball: I would reconsider your comments given this week’s international events with Russia. Just because we are in the GWOT does not mean our serious conventential competitors have given up their aims. Any aggressive land action against any nation state requires the establishment of air dominance first so the ground troops have some chance of success. Without air dominance, the ground forces can be easily decimated and cut off by an adversary’s air power.

The summary on page xvii showed how much stealth materials have added to fighter and bomber costs that are nearly twice the inflation rate since 1975 according to page 11 of the study. One need only compare the cost of a $5000 car in 1975 to a comparable $25,000 car today to see a 5-fold increase in cost vs. more like an 8-fold increase in cost between a early F-15 and a F-22.

The bottom line is if you choose stealth…and more titanium instead of the aluminum in the F-16 for instance…then you must live with fewer fighters and bombers. Otherwise air services require a disproportionate share of the DoD budget.

The good news is that stealth would cost our enemies just as much. No nation on earth will be able to produce sufficient numbers of stealth aircraft to match the U.S F-22/F-35 fleet, even assuming that they figure out similar technology. Add the exponential increase in the future price of fuel, and maintenance of stealth that deters pilot training, and we can easily handle any threat air force when you add all our services fighters, our own highly capable air defenses, and allied fighter fleets.

But when you see pictures in Georgia, you don’t focus on Russian jets. You see Russian tanks and BMPs because those are the systems that establish a ground presence. True our fighters/bombers could put a hurt on those tanks/BMPs…but not so easily if they hide or intermingle with the Georgian population. In the end, you need both airpower and ground power to deter Russia, and fight them conventionally if required should their aggression spread to other former Eastern Bloc countries.

So be happy with your last generation of manned aircraft, because with fuel and stealth materiel costs as they are, the next time around we will have many more unmanned fighters/bombers up there resembling Reapers rather than F-22s.

What if you tell the truth, are we suppose to be excluded from chat,freedom of speach is a thing of the past I guessI guess we will see.

Regarding Air Defense on 9/11, did anyone even consider that even if fighters had scrambled in time, no one would have considered shooting down a civilian airliner in those days?

A hijack use to mean taking a plane to Cuba.

Once again too, I agree with RadarNav. Just because the current war is against asymmetrical opponents, that doesn’t mean a near-peer (China, Russia, India, etc.) won’t challenge our forces in the future for resources. Once that happens, it’s far too late to start building the next gen fighters.

Another factor in the rising cost is the way the government wants more capability added on after the initial contrat was let. This causes the price to rise. Alos low production rates that stretches out the delivery schedule also adds additional cost.

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