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Title: Skills Mismatch? Military Service, Combat Occupations, and Civilian Earnings
Resulting in 1 citation.
1. MacLean, Alair
Skills Mismatch? Military Service, Combat Occupations, and Civilian Earnings
Sociological Perspectives 60,2 (April 2017): 229-250.
Also: http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0731121416632011
Cohort(s): NLSY79
Publisher: Pacific Sociological Association
Keyword(s): Earnings; Military Service; Occupations; Veterans

Permission to reprint the abstract has not been received from the publisher.

Research has evaluated the impact of military service on socioeconomic outcomes, but little research has assessed the association between such outcomes and military occupations. The following article examines this relationship by analyzing the National Longitudinal Study of Youth 1979. It evaluates whether military occupations produce associations that are consistent with hypotheses based on theories of skills mismatch, selection, or turning points. Contrary to expectations, veterans of combat occupations did not have different earnings from those of other occupations, which suggests that any apparent effects of combat exposure reflect neither skills mismatch nor selection into these roles. Yet veterans earned less than nonveterans at the same years of combined military and civilian experience, regardless of occupation. These findings indicate that employers did not value time in the military as much as time in the civilian labor market.
Bibliography Citation
MacLean, Alair. "Skills Mismatch? Military Service, Combat Occupations, and Civilian Earnings." Sociological Perspectives 60,2 (April 2017): 229-250.