Mady W. Segal, Ph.D. Professor Emerita University of Maryland, U.S.

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Military and Veteran Vt Families Well Being: WllB Focus on Spouse Employment Mady W. Segal, Ph.D. Professor Emerita University of Maryland, U.S. E mail: msegal@umd.eduedu 1

Why be concerned with Spouse Employment? Well being of Military Personnel, Veterans, and their Families affected by Spouses Earnings and Employment Satisfaction Virginia is home to large proportion of military personnel, veterans, and spouses Military spouses have serious employment disadvantages (and they may be cumulative Many veterans (including those disabled) rely on spouse s earnings 2

Data Source Data from the American Community Survey 2005 2009 Prepared for the Office of the First Lady by: Mary K. Kniskern & Dr. David R. Segal 2011 This is the source for statistics and graphs. Other findings and conclusions derive from additional research. 3

Prepared 27 April 2011 4

Labor Force Participation of Married Women (U.S.) Military wives are less likely than their civilian counterparts to be employed This finding holds regardless of their education or whether they have moved in past year If employed, military wives are less likely to be employed full time 5

Unemployment of Military Wives (U.S.) Higher percentages of military wives unemployed (not employed, but seeking work) thanwivesofcivilianmen 6

Prepared 27 April 2011 7

12 Percentage of Married Women Unemployed in States Where Most Military Wives Reside 10 8 6 4 2 0 Military Wives Civilian Wives 8

Percentage of Married Women Unemployed in States Where Most Military Spouses Reside Military Civilian % Mil Spouses State Unemployed Unemployed Residing in State California 6.91 3.69 10.95 Virginia 5.12 2.4 10.45 Texas 6.18 3.31 8.26 North Carolina 906 9.06 34 3.4 768 7.68 Florida 5.8 3.37 5.56 Georgia 5.91 3.42 5.02 Washington 8.11 3 4.91 Hawaii 4.37 2.4 3.33 Maryland 4.4 2.79 2.79 Colorado 7.17 2.85 2.6 New York 8.72 3.02 2.35 Tennessee 6.89 3.47 2.21 South Carolina 7.14 3.28 2.1 Oklahoma 5.36 2.15 2.07 Arizona 4.2 2.66 2.02 9

10

Annual Earnin ngs in 2009 US Dolla ars 55000 50000 45000 40000 35000 30000 25000 20000 15000 10000 5000 0 Comparison of Mean Earnings between Military and Civilian Wives Employed Full time and Year Round, by State Married dwomen, Ages 18 46, with Husbands Employed Full time Data: American Communities Survey 2005 2009 California Colorado Florida Georgia Kentucky New York North Carolina Texas Virginia Washington Military Wives Civilian Wives 11

Mean Earnin ngs in 2009 US Dollars 75000 70000 65000 60000 55000 50000 45000 40000 35000 30000 25000 20000 15000 10000 5000 0 Comparisonof of Mean Earnings between Military andcivilian Wives Employed Full time Married Women, Ages 18 46, with Husbands Employed Full time Data: American Communities Survey 2005 2009 Works 35+ hours per week at time of survey Works 35+ hours per week AND 48+ weeks per year High School Diploma or GED Some College Bachelor's Degree Advanced or Professional Degree beyond Bachelor's Military Wives Civilian Wives 12

Differences in Earnings between Military and Civilian Wives Overall wage gap between civilian and military wives is 42%. This gap represents both substantially lower labor force participation by military wives, and lower earnings for employment. Among households h that t moved year prior to survey, wage gap is over 47% Among employed wives, civilian wives earn 27% more than military wives. Overall earnings gap between civilian and military wives employed fulltime is 25% Geographic mobility decreases labor force participation and earnings from employment through difficulty finding employment in new location decreased job tenure 13

Effects of high military presence in local lb labor market on women s earnings The greater the % of local labor market that is active duty, the lower the earnings of women This result holds even controllingfor other variables, e.g., age, education, race, years of job experience, numbers and ages of children Women married idto military men earn less than women married to full time employed civilian men Source: Booth, Bradford. 2003. Contextual Effects of Military Presence on Women s Earnings. Armed Forces & Society 30:25 52. 52. 14

Civilian Husbands of Military Women Research presented so far covers only civilian wives of military men (more than 85% of civilian spouses of military personnel). Other research compares civilian husbands of military women to civilian wives of military men Male military spouses (civilian husbands of military women) earn more than their female counterparts But these husbands are more dissatisfied i d with ihtheir hi employment than are civilian wives of military men Source: Cooney, Richard, Karin De Angelis, and Mady W. Segal. 2011. Moving With the Military: Race, Class, and Gender Differences in the Employment Consequences of Tied Migration". Race, Gender and Class 18, No. 1 2: 360 384. 15

Negative Effects of Moving on Military Spouse Employment Increases unemployment Decreases wages Decreases satisfaction with employment Geographic mobility measures: Number of moves Time between moves Time at current location 16

Military Spouse Employment Programs First federal efforts: Writing resume Dressing for job interviews Behavior at job interviews This helps, p, but not effective if: There are not enough jobs Jobs available do not match spouse skill level State licensing requirements hinder employment (especially after moving) 17

Other Existing and Proposed Employment Efforts For veterans, military spouses, and military children of working age Public private partnerships to create jobs Example: Building on installations for use by private employers in exchange for training/hiring veterans and military family members Tax incentives for employers to train and hire military and veteran family members Building/low rent on state property for use by employers of veterans and military/veteran family members In state tuition for veteran and military family members 18

Other Recommendations Conduct research on military personnel and families in the state to determine needs and programs likely to fulfill those needs Build evaluations into program plans Update data on spouse employment Measure veterans and military/veteran spouses awareness of programs In determining program needs and evaluation, analyze differences by education, race, age, gender, time at current location, etc. 19

Questions and Comments 20

Supplementary slides follow 21

Mean Earnings (in dollars) and Labor Force Participation of Married Women American Community Survey 2006 2008 CIVILIAN MILITARY Difference in mean Mean Earnings Not in Labor Force Seeking Work Mean Earnings Not in Labor Force Seeking Work earnings I. Overall *** 26,965.63 25.3% 2.6% 15,692.17 43.3% 5.1% 41.8% II. Moved *** 23079.55 30.9% 4.4% 12117.39 49.3% 9.0% 47.5% Did not move *** 27350.91 24.8% 2.3% 17513.11 40.3% 3.2% 36.0% III. Earnings by Educational Attainment 41.8% Less than High School diploma *** 9,041.58 49.4% 4.6% 6,005.71 64.3% 7.5% 33.6% High School diploma or GED *** 17,994.87 28.2% 3.0% 9,617.49 47.6% 5.6% 46.6% Some College, less than Bachelor's *** 23,968.24 22.9% 2.5% 12,655.68 44.7% 5.4% 47.2% Bachelor's degree *** 34091.70 23.2% 1.7% 19,890.67 39.5% 4.3% 41.7% Graduate education beyond Bachelor's *** 50,738.31 16.0% 1.4% 33,199.03 29.2% 4.8% 34.6% IV. V. CIVILIAN MILITARY Difference Mean Earnings Mean Earnings in mean earnings Earnings by Education if Working Full or Parttime 26.8% Less than High School diploma 16,908.19 13,659.68 not statistically significant High School diploma or GED *** 24,449.35 17,465.31 28.6% Some College, less than Bachelor's *** 30,408.38 21,102.02 30.6% Bachelor's degree *** 43,418.27 30,772.84 29.1% Graduate education beyond Bachelor's *** 59,279.07 45,301.77 23.6% Earnings by Education if Working Full time 24.9% Less than High School diploma * 20,402.18 16,415.63 63 19.5% High School diploma or GED *** 28,774.39 20,999.51 27.0% Some College, less than Bachelor's *** 35,670.94 25,451.85 28.6% Bachelor's degree *** 51,280.75 37,078.88 27.7% Graduate education beyond Bachelor's *** 67,006.65 53,520.19 20.1% Statistical significance of variables: *0.05 *** 0.001 Prepared 30 NOV 2010

Moving with the Military: Race, Class, and Gender Differences in the Employment Consequences of Tied Migration i Richard T. Cooney Mady Wechsler Segal Karin De Angelis Center for Research on Military Organization University of Maryland, College Park 23

Mobility & Satisfaction w/ Job Opportunities ii SATISFACTION WITH JOB OPPORTUNITIES OVERALL GENDER RACE - 28.5% of spouses were dissatisfied & 17.2% were very dissatisfied with opportunities (= 45.7% DS) - For each additional year at current location, the likelihood of being DS decreased d by 5.6% (but stronger effect for minorities iti than for Whites). - Likelihood of a civilian wife being DS is 35.3% lower than the likelihood of civilian husband being DS - Asians and Whites do not differ significantly - Black spouses are 42.2% more likely than Whites to be DS CLASS -Enlisted spouses of all rank categories es are significantly more likely to be DS than spouses of senior officers INTERSECTION - Black women 49.7% more likely than White women to be DS - Black men do not differ significantly from White men - White women only half as likely as White men to be DS - Black women twice as likely as Black men to be DS 24

Mobility & Employment GENDER Employment - Women are 43.7% less likely to be employed than men - No significant difference in impact of mobility on employment RACE - Black spouses are 22.1% more likely than White spouses to be employed - For every year at location, Whites likelihood of employment increases by 12.8%; for Black spouses, the increase is 56.5% per year - Unlike Whites, # of children not a significant determinant of Black spousal employment CLASS - Spouses of junior enlisted personnel are 39.1%, spouses of midgrade enlisted are 73.9%, and spouses of senior enlisted are 77.4% more likely than spouses of field grade officers to be employed - No significant difference in employment rates among officer spouses (company grade v. field grade) - Mobility does not significantly affect officers spouses, but spouses of enlisted members more likely to work with fewer moves 25

Mobility & Earnings Earnings OVERALL GENDER - Each move is associated with a 2% loss of earnings - Every year increase in time between moves is associated with 1.3% increase in earnings; this increases to 2.6% after one year time on station ti - Women earn 17.6% less than men RACE -Mobility differentially affects White and Asian spouses; ses White spouses lose about 2.4% per move, Asians receive a premium of 15.4% per move CLASS INTERSECTION - Enlisted spouses of all rank categories earn significantly less than officer spouses - Black men do not differ significantly from White men - Black women earn 28.4% more than White women - White women earn 23% less than White men - Black men and women do not differ significantly from each other 26

Potential Impact of Decreasing Geographic Mobility* Group/Sub- Group Satisfaction with Opportunities Employment Earnings Men +12.4% +30.0% Not Significant Women +8.7% +20.0% +3.3% White +6.9% +17.7% +2.4% Black +15.1% +39.5% Not Significant Spouses of Enlisted +9.8% +14.3% Not Significant Spouses of +7.5% +19.3% +1.6% Officers TOTAL +9.6% +19.4% +3.4% * Average time between moves and time at current location increased by one year, number of moves decreased by one, all other variables held constant. 27

Causes of Lower Employment Outcomes Moving (more frequently and longer distances) Local labor markets in vicinity of military installations Employer bias against hiring transient military spouses 28