It came out in ’63, too early for ‘Nam. It’s about what used to be called the “military industrial complex”
When Dylan sings:
Come you masters of war
You that build all the guns
You that build the death planes
You that build the big bombs
You that hide behind walls
You that hide behind desks
I just want you to know
I can see through your masks
…he is talking about things like the RAND Corporation, Herman Kahn, Defense contracting, “Weapons System Acquisition”, and “Research Development Test and Evaluation” (RDT&E).
The last few of these drive the economy of Greene County, and perhaps to an increasing extent (as manufacturing fades) Montgomery County, too.
The now familiar (on this blog) NAICS key:

....and the sectors in Greene County aggregated by payroll:

Breaking out the sectors to see payroll trends. Again PS&T is the driver, with a cluster of sectors in the mid range and a gaggle near the bottom:


Nothing but blue skies and sunny days ahead for technical professionals in Greene County. Opening up the PS&T sector, one sees the strength of computers and Scientific R&D, and also Engineering to some extent:


Note that it was Computer Services that drove the growth of the PS&T sector in Montgomery County, too, so one wonders if there is a relationship?

Employment growth matches payroll to some extent:


The Masters of War.
The Dayton Development Coalition (DDC) is pretty upfront the impact of defense contracting. Here is a map of some of the larger contractors, from their "Dayton Region At A Glance" download.
Familiar names to anyone who knows anything about this word. There might be smaller contractors and subcontractors not shown:

But then comes Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC), which is will shift some of infotech workload out of the area.
The Dayton Daily News reported:
The biggest loss in terms of jobs appears to be the Development and Fielding Systems Group, formerly known as the Materiel Systems Group. It's located at Wright-Patterson but is a unit of the Electronic Systems Center at Hanscom Air Force Base in Massachusetts….
….The Pentagon recommended the move as part of an effort to consolidate technical work known as C4ISR — command, control, communications, computers, intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance….
….The job impact also isn't clear. The section of the BRAC report dealing with the C4ISR realignment said the economic impact on the Dayton area would be 2,250 jobs, including 988 contractor jobs — far more than the report's economic impact tables indicate.
To diagram this, the hit to the “private sector” footprint via contractors and indirect economic impact could be considerably larger than the military activity being relocated. (assuming the contractor workforce relocates):


(if you want to see enlarged graphs click on the images).
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