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2 - The Costs of Responding to the Terrorist Threats: The U.S. Case

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 July 2010

Gregory F. Treverton
Affiliation:
Director, RAND's Center for Global Risk and Security
Justin L. Adams
Affiliation:
Director of Economic Studies, Forward Observer
James Dertouzos
Affiliation:
Senior Economist
Arindam Dutta
Affiliation:
Doctoral Fellow, RAND; Consultant, The World Bank
Susan S. Everingham
Affiliation:
Director, International Programs within RAND's National Security Research Division
Eric V. Larson
Affiliation:
Senior Policy Researcher
Philip Keefer
Affiliation:
The World Bank
Norman Loayza
Affiliation:
The World Bank
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Summary

Introduction

The end of the cold war and the rise of international terrorism have dramatically changed perceptions of national security. Where nations once saw threats emanating primarily from state actors located abroad, they now look also at nonstate entities acting both at home and abroad, as well as to failed states. Threats from nonstate actors have become a more significant issue for both rich and poor states. Table 2.1 displays those changes in perception of the threat, using the United States as an example.

A full analysis of the costs of terrorism would include the costs to rich and poor states, including those costs of rich country efforts to defend against terrorist threats imposed on the poor. This chapter takes a first step by examining the costs to the rich states of addressing the terrorism threat, not the costs of terrorism itself or of the immediate responses to an attack. In that sense, the costs might be thought of as the “secondary” cost of countering terrorism, rather than the “proximate” costs of terrorism. Understandably, the latter have received more attention than the former. However, some sense of where the money is going is necessary to identify possible trade-offs and ask whether the current portfolio of expenditures is the most sensible one. Table 2.2 summarizes the various distinctions and their implications for cost.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2008

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