Military Retirement

Military Retirement
Author: Charles A. Henning
Publisher: DIANE Publishing
Total Pages: 18
Release: 2011
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1437939732

This is a print on demand edition of a hard to find publication. The military retirement system is a non-contributory, defined benefit system that has historically been viewed as a significant incentive in retaining a career military force. Congress grapples with constituent concerns as well as budgetary constraints when considering military retirement issues. While congressionally mandated changes to the military retirement system have been infrequent, any potential future changes are closely monitored by current and future retirees, and the vets¿ service org. who support them. Contents of this report: (1) Overview; (2) Three Systems, Different Retired Pay Calculations; (3) Retired Pay and the Cost-of-Living Allowance (COLA); (4) Military Retirement Budgeting and Costs; (5) Reforming the Military Retirement System. Tables.

An Overview of Past Proposals for Military Retirement Reform

An Overview of Past Proposals for Military Retirement Reform
Author: John Christian
Publisher: Rand Corporation
Total Pages: 41
Release: 2006
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 0833039873

By one estimate, between fiscal years 1995 and 2005, total compensation costs for current and former military personnel increased by almost 60 percent. The military retirement benefit remains a significant portion of these costs, and every change to accessions, retention, and basic pay today will have a future effect on pension expenditures. This technical report provides an overview of the history of U.S. military retirement studies and associated legislation, with a particular focus on the past 60 years of proposed reforms. It is organized around the following five major issues that have driven attempts at retirement system reform: cost, equity, selective retention, civilian comparability, and force management flexibility. The author finds that cost alone is reason to analyze the current retirement system, and reform proposals of the past have focused carefully on cost. However, he also finds that, as the military's mission evolves over time, it is also important to consider the sometimes subtle incentive effects that the retirement system has on service member behavior. Beyond considerations of cost, reform of the military retirement system necessarily involves ramifications for force structure and operational readiness.

The Accrual Method for Funding Military Retirement

The Accrual Method for Funding Military Retirement
Author: Richard Eisenman
Publisher: RAND Corporation
Total Pages: 106
Release: 2001
Genre: History
ISBN:

Until 1984, the amount appearing in the DoD budget under "military retirement" was the annual payment to retired military personnel or their survivors--equaling approximately $16 billion that year. That amount reflected the number of retirees and the retirement system that resulted from force-management decisions made 20 or more years earlier. Those managing the personnel force in 1984 essentially had no control over these retirement-budget payments. Similarly, force managers in 1984 could make decisions influencing future retirement expenditures without answering for them in their own budgets. Policymakers were concerned that this system could result in increasingly expensive retirement plans, a more senior force, more retirees than justified by force-readiness considerations, and poor decisions involving substitution of civilian and military personnel and between capital and labor investments.