Socioeconomic Status of Enlisted Accessions and Civilians
Employment Status

Chapter 7

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Table 7.4 reports, by Service, the rates of fathers and mothers who were employed.  In the CPS, the civilian labor force is defined as all employed and unemployed civilians 16 years and over. [1]   Unemployed, however, is limited to those civilians who made a specific effort to find a job within the past four weeks.  All other persons are “not in the labor force.”  For this report, civilian comparison employment computations are based on all parents in the non-institutional population, including those not in the labor force. [2]   The three employment categories (employed, unemployed, not in the labor force) are included because recruits’ parents represent the total population, not just the defined “labor force.”

DoD recruit mothers were somewhat more likely to be employed than CPS mothers (79 percent for DoD mothers and 74 percent for CPS mothers). [3]   Fathers were more likely to be employed than mothers, but there were no notable differences in employment between CPS and DoD fathers (89 percent of CPS and 90 percent of DoD fathers were employed).  Employment rates were similar across Services and components, although mothers of Air Force accessions were slightly more likely to be employed than the active duty average.

 

Table 7.4.  Employed Parents of FY 1999 NPS Recruits, by Gender and Service, with Civilian Comparison Group (Percent)

 

Active Component

DoD Subtotal

Total

Gender of Parent

 Army

  Navy

Marine Corps

Air Force

Active Duty

Guard/ Reserve

 DoD

  CPS

Male

88.7

89.7

91.1

92.1

90.1

90.4

90.1

88.9

Female

76.6

78.4

79.6

81.6

78.6

79.2

78.7

74.1

DoD percentages exclude "no longer living" and "don’t know" responses.
Source:  Civilian data from Bureau of Labor Statistics Current Population Survey File, October 1998–September 1999.


[1] See U. S. Census Bureau, Statistical Abstract of the United States: 1999 (Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1999), pp. 408–409, for a detailed explanation of labor force employment categories and the component parts of each category.

[2] Approximately 7 percent of recruits’ fathers, 15 percent of recruits’ mothers, 9 percent of CPS fathers, and 23 percent of CPS mothers were reported as “not in the labor force.”

[3] The recruit survey asks recruits whether the parent is currently working at a paid job, in a business, or on a farm, while the CPS asks whether the individual was employed in the last week.  Thus, comparisons of employment rates from the two data sets must be interpreted with caution.

 


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