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Married to the Military

The Employment and Earnings of Military Wives Compared with Those of Civilian Wives

Cover: MR-1565 | Married to the Military:  The Employment and Earnings of Military Wives Compared with Those of Civilian Wives

By: James Hosek, Beth J. Asch, C. Christine Fair, Craig Martin, Michael Mattock

Today's military is a military of families; many service members are married, and many of their spouses work and contribute to family income. But military wives earn less than civilian wives, and this study seeks to understand why. The authors find that military wives, knowing they are likely to move frequently, are willing to accept jobs that offer a lower wage rather than to use more of their remaining time at a location to find a higher-wage job. Compared with civilian wives, military wives tend to work somewhat less if they have young children but somewhat more if their children are older. The probability that military wives work declines with age, although it changes little with age in the civilian world. This probability declines more rapidly for wives with a college education, most of whom are officers' wives. Although it is often assumed that military families live in rural areas where the job opportunities for wives are poor, the authors found fairly small differences in the location of civilian versus military families. Finally, whereas in the civilian world an increase in the unemployment rate leads to a slight increase in the probability that wives worked during the year and the probability that they worked full-time (responding as "added workers" to the loss or threat of loss of their husbands' work), military wives appear to respond as workers with a more permanent attachment to the labor force.

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Paperback Cover Price: $20.00

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Pages: 154

ISBN/EAN: 0-8330-3180-5

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Contents

Chapter One:
Introduction

Chapter Two:
Theoretical Considerations

Chapter Three:
Data, Methodology, and Empirical Hypotheses

Chapter Four:
Descriptive Results

Chapter Five:
Regression Results

Chapter Six:
Conclusion

Appendix A:
Data Sources

Appendix B:
Summary Statistics and Regression Coefficients

Appendix C:
Presence of Children Under Age 6 Among Families with Children

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