Post 9/11 Domestic Security Spending Exceeds Cost of New Deal

April 28th, 2013

Via: CNN / Fortune:

Video surveillance is already big business. In the aftermath of the Boston Marathon bombings, expect it to get even bigger.

In response to security concerns after 9/11, Americans witnessed the growth of a massive domestic security apparatus, fueled by federal largesse. According to Tomdispatch’s Mattea Kramer and Chris Heilman, post-9/11 federal spending on homeland security exceeds $790 billion. That’s larger than TARP and, when adjusted for inflation, the New Deal.

Exactly how much the U.S. has spent on domestic surveillance is murky. Municipalities aren’t particularly keen on sharing how many cameras they’ve installed. And homeland security grant funding, in many cases, does not require a line-item accounting of how cities have used federal funds.

Nevertheless, U.S. investment has helped fuel the growth of a global video surveillance industry. According to a 2011 report by Electronics.ca Publications, a market research firm, the video surveillance market was slated to grow from $11.5 billion in 2008 to $37.5 billion in 2015.

The post-9/11 investment legacy is apparent in the near-ubiquitous presence of law enforcement CCTV cameras. For instance, New York City has more than 4,000 cameras in Manhattan alone, according to the ACLU. Chicago’s linked public and private security cameras number around 10,000. But based on international comparisons, there’s still a lot of room for U.S. surveillance to grow. In London — the Xanadu of winking, digital eyes — surveillance cameras total an estimated half-million.

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