No. Cash values are extremely valuable to compare the resources spent on the nuclear program.Simon_Jester wrote:Iosef, not this again.
You cannot measure a wartime economy purely in terms of dollar values. That is an Economics 101 level mistake. You should know better than to do this.
Also, you appear to really believe that you are right in this subject, it is not rational for you to do so.
In WW2, neither the US nor Germany ceased to be a monetary economy. The governments financed the war thought these means:In wartime, the cash economy is far less relevant if you are the government, because you do not, strictly speaking, need to pay people for things. You can simply confiscate the tools you need, or forcibly conscript/enslave the labor you need.
1- Increased national debt.
2- Increased taxes.
3- Fixed prices and rationing to the armed forces.
Even with rationing prices are still the correct way of measuring resource consumption. Why? Let's assume that we have 100 units of resource B and 50 units of resource A. Initial prices are 10 for B and 20 for A. Total expenditures are 20,000 and taxes are of 25% over income, meaning that government expenditures are of 5,000.
If the goverment enter in a world war and needs to increase their resource consumption to 50% of total production, they can fix prices at 5 for B and 10 for A, continue to tax 25% of total income and ration half of output to the government. The use of money to measure relative resource use is still 100% valid, nominal GDP will decrease to 10,000 and the price level will fall by 50%, a large proportion of the resources would be rationed, since nominal demand for the goods will be larger than the supply.
If you don't have actual data on the consumption of electricity, chemical equipment, etc in proportion to German and US supply of respective resources, you do not have an argument.A nuclear program consumes highly skilled engineers, massive amounts of electricity, a great deal of chemical equipment, and so forth. It is these areas where Germany would face dire shortages, where it would have to take assets off other programs in favor of the atomic bomb.
I have only these data: Germany total electricity production for 1940 was 67 billion kw/h, US electricity production for 1939 was 120 billion kw/h and over 200 billion kw/h for 1943 and 1944. If the US nuclear program consumed 1/6 of the 200 billion kw/h, the electricity consumption of the nuclear program would be about 35 billion kw/h, about the same as the electricity consumption at the time of the USSR.
The total amount of steel that Germany allocated to the armed forces during WW2 was nearly 100 million tons (1.2-1.5 million tons per month for the 68 months of WW2), while the total amount of steel used in the US nuclear program certainly wasn't in the order of tens of millions of tons. They probably consumed 1-2 million tons of steel for the nuclear program, about the same proportion of Germany's supply as money.
The number of men conscripted in the German armed forces was 17.9 million men, more than the US, with conscripted 16 million men. The number of people employed in the nuclear program was in the order of tens of thousands.
While a large individual undertaking, the US nuclear program consumed a small proportion of the resources that any major power allocated to war. With the possible exception of electricity and scientific minds. WW2 was big.