The Economic Impact of the Iraq War on the United States Economy

The Economic Impact of the Iraq War on the United States Economy

Does war in Iraq benefit our domestic economy?

Topic

  • Does war in Iraq benefit our domestic economy?

Paper Format

  • 1,500 – 1,700 words, not including the reference (Works Cited) page. Verify this with word-count in Microsoft Word and include the actual word count typed at the bottom of the last page of text, before the reference page.
  • The paper should be typed, double-spaced, on white paper, with page numbers centered at the bottom of the page.
  • The title page should contain the following in this order: general topic: specific topic, student’s name, course name, date.
  • Paper should be submitted in the dedicated DropBox in the course shell in Unit 7.

Research Sources

Students should use at least four different acceptable research sources excluding the course textbook. The quality and quantity of these references will determine the amount of points earned for research.

Acceptable Sources: In general, citations from Internet websites will NOT count as an acceptable source unless the citation is from a U.S. government website. The Internet can be used to find on-line versions of publications, but such citations should be made only for articles that are published in paper form (i.e., can be found in a library). For instance, you could use a New York Times article that is downloaded from the Internet. Encyclopedias and abstracts are not valid sources. Cutting and pasting information from the Internet is plagiarism.

Recommended Sources:

  • The Wall Street Journal
  • New York Times online (e-mail notices of this are available for free)
  • CNN Financial News online
  • The Economist (magazine)
  • The National Review
  • The National Bureau of Economic Research
  • any academic and nonacademic journals
  • library books
  • government publications (e.g., those of Bureau of Economic Analysis, Bureau of Economic Research, Commerce Department, U.S. Census, etc.)

Format for Citations:

  • Chicago Manual of Style
  • OR MLA Handbook
  • OR APA style (e.g., Diana Hacker’s reference book)

 

Answer preview

Regardless of the reason for war, war has adverse effects. A problem arises where nations at war fail to predict the actual cost of war. Most countries ignore the human cost and concentrate on the political gains of the war. To the view of Guo, et al. (2015), war is a zero-sum game. This point means that one person wins while the other loses. When we include the human cost, this changes to be a non-zero-sum game where the countries at war lose. The fight against the reign of Sudan Hussein by the United States is one of the few battles to be documented after the second war. The war was, without any argument the worst collective experience of the humanity of the people of Iraq. Not only were enormous numbers of people were left dead, but…

 

(1600 words)

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