The Post-Service Socioeconomic Status Attainment of Women Veterans of the All-Volunteer Force.

Abstract

This thesis investigates the impact of military service on the socioeconomic status of women veterans of the post-1973 U.S. all-volunteer force by comparing the earnings and family income of women veterans to similar non-serving women. Data from the 1990 Public Use Microdata Sample L were used in this analysis. This data set is a .45 percent sample drawn from 1990 Census data and contains information on 1,139,142 individuals. These data are delineated by labor market area, which allows for the calculation and control of local labor market conditions. Military service may directly impact status attainment by increasing a woman veteran's human capital and/or her ability to convert human capital into socioeconomic status. Additionally, military service may also affect status attainment indirectly through its influence on familial variables (e.g., number of children, marital status) and through employers' perceptions of the capabilities of veterans relative to non-veterans. Using semilogarithihic regression, I found that, overall, African-American women veterans, white Hispanic women veterans,

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Jan 07, 1998
Accession Number
ADA334195

Entities

People

  • Richard T. Cooney

Organizations

  • Air Force Institute of Technology

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Biomedical

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • African Americans
  • Air Force
  • Employment
  • Enlisted Personnel
  • Ethnic Groups
  • Families (Human)
  • Information Science
  • Military Personnel
  • Minority Groups
  • Native Americans
  • Organizational Structure
  • Social Sciences
  • Sociology
  • Statistical Analysis
  • Students
  • Surveys
  • United States

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