Affiliation of naval veterans with the Selected Reserve in the 21st century

This thesis analyzes the factors that influence the decision of first-term Naval Veterans (NAVETs), who are eligible for reenlistment, to choose to affiliate with the Selected Reserve (SELRES). A model of the determinants of affiliation is specified and estimated using data on active Navy separation...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Waite, Joseph P.
Other Authors: Mehay, Stephen
Format: Others
Published: Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10945/2259
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spelling ndltd-nps.edu-oai-calhoun.nps.edu-10945-22592017-05-24T16:07:39Z Affiliation of naval veterans with the Selected Reserve in the 21st century Waite, Joseph P. Mehay, Stephen Bosque, Suzanne Naval Postgraduate School (U.S.). Graduate School of Business and Public Policy Veterans United States Naval reserves This thesis analyzes the factors that influence the decision of first-term Naval Veterans (NAVETs), who are eligible for reenlistment, to choose to affiliate with the Selected Reserve (SELRES). A model of the determinants of affiliation is specified and estimated using data on active Navy separations and Navy Reserve accessions during the period between 1990 and 2002. The data set analyzed the affiliation decisions of 388,637 NAVETs. Some of the features in the maximum likelihood logit model include the use of rating groups to determine differences in affiliation patterns by occupational categories, determining differences over various time periods, and looking at pay and unemployment rate elasticities across rating groups. Overall, NAVET affiliation in the SELRES is found to depend upon Reserve pay, unemployment rates, census region, gender, race, marital status, dependency status, age at time of separation from active duty, education, mental category, and Navy rating. More specifically, the findings indicate that technical ratings are more responsive to changes in pay than nontechnical ratings, while the unemployment elasticity indicates that affiliation increases with an increase in the unemployment rate. Various time periods were analyzed to determine if the drawdown years of the early 1990s differed from the rest of the sample, and to determine if differences existed during and after the 'dot.com' boom of the late 1990s. In both cases, models in the restricted period were found to be significantly different from the pooled period. Females, Blacks and Hispanics were more likely to affiliate, while those NAVETs who are married, have children, and are older are less likely to affiliate. Finally, there was a significant regional effect in the probability of affiliation. 2012-03-14T17:34:40Z 2012-03-14T17:34:40Z 2005-03 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10945/2259 61124281 Approved for public release, distribution unlimited x, 57 p. ; application/pdf Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Veterans
United States
Naval reserves
spellingShingle Veterans
United States
Naval reserves
Waite, Joseph P.
Affiliation of naval veterans with the Selected Reserve in the 21st century
description This thesis analyzes the factors that influence the decision of first-term Naval Veterans (NAVETs), who are eligible for reenlistment, to choose to affiliate with the Selected Reserve (SELRES). A model of the determinants of affiliation is specified and estimated using data on active Navy separations and Navy Reserve accessions during the period between 1990 and 2002. The data set analyzed the affiliation decisions of 388,637 NAVETs. Some of the features in the maximum likelihood logit model include the use of rating groups to determine differences in affiliation patterns by occupational categories, determining differences over various time periods, and looking at pay and unemployment rate elasticities across rating groups. Overall, NAVET affiliation in the SELRES is found to depend upon Reserve pay, unemployment rates, census region, gender, race, marital status, dependency status, age at time of separation from active duty, education, mental category, and Navy rating. More specifically, the findings indicate that technical ratings are more responsive to changes in pay than nontechnical ratings, while the unemployment elasticity indicates that affiliation increases with an increase in the unemployment rate. Various time periods were analyzed to determine if the drawdown years of the early 1990s differed from the rest of the sample, and to determine if differences existed during and after the 'dot.com' boom of the late 1990s. In both cases, models in the restricted period were found to be significantly different from the pooled period. Females, Blacks and Hispanics were more likely to affiliate, while those NAVETs who are married, have children, and are older are less likely to affiliate. Finally, there was a significant regional effect in the probability of affiliation.
author2 Mehay, Stephen
author_facet Mehay, Stephen
Waite, Joseph P.
author Waite, Joseph P.
author_sort Waite, Joseph P.
title Affiliation of naval veterans with the Selected Reserve in the 21st century
title_short Affiliation of naval veterans with the Selected Reserve in the 21st century
title_full Affiliation of naval veterans with the Selected Reserve in the 21st century
title_fullStr Affiliation of naval veterans with the Selected Reserve in the 21st century
title_full_unstemmed Affiliation of naval veterans with the Selected Reserve in the 21st century
title_sort affiliation of naval veterans with the selected reserve in the 21st century
publisher Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10945/2259
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