There have been some wild assertions about F-35 unit cost
recently. See the Lockheed claims
as reported in Breaking Defense,
Defense News and
others that we
should expect F-35A costs to be $85 million in 2019.
None of these articles acknowledged that there are ways to measure F-35
unit cost other than by mouthing Lockheed and/or Joint Program Office
prognostications for the future.
If you are interested in what they didn't report, see a five part
analysis of F-35 costs in Time magazine from last June, summarized
here.
However, as the great seer Yogi Berra said, "Predictions are hazardous, especially about the
future."
Lockheed-Martin
predictions, especially without balance from the press, are more than hazardous;
they are toxic, and they come with an
agenda.
Try
instead, empirical data from as recently as last month from sources that
typically work hand-in-glove with the Pentagon.
They would be the House and Senate Armed Services Committees.
Their National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) was squirted through the
Senate and signed into law on December 26. On questions like funding for high
priority weapons, like the F-35, they virtually never act without consulting
closely with the Pentagon, even if they don't always cough up every penny
requested. For their 2014 bill,
they did indeed take a few nicks out of the F-35 program, but the numbers,
released in their "Joint Explanatory Statement" for the 2014 NDAA, give
a more revealing view of F-35 unit costs than what Lockheed and some
uninquisitive articles asserted at the end of 2013.
The cost estimates in the NDAA for the cheapest version of the
F-35, the Air Force's F-35A, are the following. (Note these costs as just for
production and do not include R&D.)
The 2014 procurement cost for 19 F-35As will be $2.989
billion. However, we need to add
to that the "long lead" money for the 2014 buy that was appropriated in 2013;
that was $293 million, making a total of $3.282 billion for 19 aircraft in
2014. The math for unit cost comes
to $172.7 million for each aircraft.
To be fully accurate, however, we should add the additional
procurement money authorized for "modification of aircraft" for F-35As for 2014;
that means $158 million more, bringing the total unit production cost to $181
million per copy.
None of that includes the 2014 R&D bill for the F-35A; that
was $816 million; calculate that in if you want; I choose not
to.
The Marine Corps and Navy versions are a little
pricier.
For the Marines B, or STOVL, model, the authorized 2014 buy is
six (6) aircraft for $1.267 billion in 2014 procurement, $106 million in 2013
long lead money, and $147 million in 2014 aircraft procurement
modifications. That calculates to
$252.3 million for each one.
For the Navy's C, carrier-capable (but not yet), model, we get
four (4) aircraft for $1.135 billion, plus $32 million in long lead, plus $31
million in modifications. That
means $299.5 million for each one.
Actual F-35 unit costs are today multiples of what Lockheed says
they will be. If you think it is
reasonable to expect them to plummet to the $85 million Lockheed glibly promises
(thanks to the ubiquitous "learning curve" and other manipulations), please
consider a somewhat different analysis, also in Time,
available here.
The cost data from the 2014 NDAA is not the last word. Authorization bills actually have
little to do with real money, but the House and Senate Armed Services Committees
like to conform their bill to whatever the latest DOD data happens to be. Keep an eye out for the 2014
appropriations bill, due out as early as next week.
That is the real money bill, and it will contain not just the latest word
on F-35 costs but all the money the 2014 F-35 program will see.
My guess is that it will differ little from the NDAA, but if the numbers
are different, they will likely show a cut to both total dollars and the number
of aircraft bought. That is not
good news for F-35 idolaters: cuts to the F-35 top line will almost surely mean
deeper proportional cuts to the number bought, and the unit cost will go
up.
Lockheed claims on F-35 unit costs are easy fodder for ridicule,
but for some reason the press I have seen reporting on those claims did not
report any data from an available alternate source.
Because they didn't, I am.
Keep an eye out for the actual F-35 costs in the 2014
appropriations bill and how the press reports on them.
After that, keep an eye out for what DOD puts in its 2015 budget request
for the F-35. It is a real
question whether those data will calculate to a lower unit cost for the F-35 or
a higher one, learning curve prognostications
notwithstanding.
Treat Lockheed's predictions with all the respect they
deserve. Consider similarly press
reports on those predictions that do not give you more reliable data or any
wider perspective.
__________________
Winslow T. Wheeler
Director
Straus Military Reform Project
Project On Government Oversight
301 791-2397 (home office)
301 221-3897 (cell)
Winslow T. Wheeler
Director
Straus Military Reform Project
Project On Government Oversight
301 791-2397 (home office)
301 221-3897 (cell)
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