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Report to the Subcommittee on Personnel, Committee on Armed Services, 

U.S. Senate:



September 2002:



MILITARY PERSONNEL:



Active Duty Benefits Reflect Changing Demographics, but Opportunities 

Exist to Improve:



GAO-02-935:



Contents:



Letter:



Results in Brief:



Background:



DOD’s Benefits Reflect Demographic Changes in the Active Force:



DOD Offers Wide Array of Benefits for Active Duty Service

Members:



Conclusions:



Recommendations for Executive Action:



Agency Comments and Our Evaluation:



Scope and Methodology:



Appendixes:



Appendix I: Active Duty Pay, Allowances, and Benefits:



Appendix II: Demographic Trends in the Active Duty Service Members:



Appendix III: Selected Employee Benefits for Active Duty Service 

Members:



Child and Youth Programs:



Death and Burial Benefits:



Disability:



Discount Shopping:



Education Assistance:



Family Support Services:



Health Care:



Housing:



Life Insurance:



Miscellaneous:



Paid Time Off:



Retirement and Savings:



Appendix IV: Trends in Selected Private-Sector Employee Benefits:



Accidental Death and Dismemberment:



Child Care Assistance:



Convenience Benefits:



Elder Care Assistance:



Employee Assistance Programs:



Flexible Benefits:



Flexible Spending Accounts:



Flexible Work Arrangements:



Life Insurance:



Long-Term Care Insurance:



Health Insurance:



Paid Time Off:



Personal Financial Employee Education:



Relocation Assistance:



Retiree Health Benefits:



Retirement Plans:



Short-and Long-Term Disability:



Survivor Income Insurance:



Tuition Assistance:



Appendix V: Comments from the Department of Defense:



Appendix VI: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgements:



Table:



Table 1: Components of the Military Compensation System:



Figures:



Figure 1: Composition of Active Duty Force by Family Status (as of 

Sept. 2000):



Figure 2: Range of Military Benefits Offered to All Active Duty 

Personnel:



Figure 3: Composition of the Active Duty Force by Age Group (1974-
2000):



Figure 4: Education Levels of the Active Duty Force (1974-2000):



Figure 5: Minority and Female Representation in the Active Duty Force 

(1974-2000):



Figure 6: Median Age of Employed U.S. Civilians (1974-2000):



Figure 7: Education Level of U.S. Civilian Labor Force (1992-2000):



Figure 8: Minority and Female Representation in the U.S. Civilian Labor 

Force (1974-2000):



Figure 9: Marriage Rates in the Active Duty Military (1980-2000):



Figure 10: Marriage Rates in the U.S. Civilian Labor Force (1976-2000):



Abbreviations:



DOD: Department of Defense:



GAO: General Accounting Office:



Letter September 18, 2002:



The Honorable Max Cleland

Chairman

The Honorable Tim Hutchinson

Ranking Minority Member

Subcommittee on Personnel

Committee on Armed Services

United States Senate:



The Department of Defense (DOD) uses employee benefits--that is, 

indirect compensation above and beyond a service member’s basic pay--as 

one tool to recruit and retain personnel.[Footnote 1] Employee benefits 

are part of DOD’s overall military compensation system that also 

includes basic military pay, special pays, and allowances. (See app. I 

for a list of specific elements of the military compensation system.) 

DOD provides employee benefits to more than 1.3 million active duty 

service members and their nearly 2 million spouses and dependents.



The Subcommittee expressed concerns about whether the current employee 

benefit package available to active duty service members has kept pace 

with changes in the demographic composition of the force and whether 

the benefit package positions DOD to compete with private-sector 

companies for high-quality personnel. Because of these concerns, the 

Subcommittee asked us to review the active duty benefit structure. 

Specifically, our objectives were to determine (1) how DOD has changed 

benefits in response to demographic changes in the active duty military 

since the advent of the all-volunteer force in 1973 and (2) how the 

military’s overall benefit package compares with the array of benefits 

offered by private-sector firms.[Footnote 2]



This report expands on the issues we covered in our April 2002 

testimony on active duty benefits.[Footnote 3]



Results in Brief:



DOD has instituted a number of benefits that reflect demographic 

changes in the active duty force since the draft ended and the military 

became an all-volunteer force in 1973. Many of these benefits address 

one of the most significant demographic changes--an increase in service 

members with family obligations. For each year between 1980 and 2000, 

at least half of the active duty force consisted of married service 

members, and active duty service members had about 1.23 million 

children in 2000. A second major demographic change in the active 

military has been the growing proportion of service members who are 

women. In 2000, women comprised about 15 percent of the active duty 

force, compared with 4 percent in 1974. Up to 10 percent of women in 

the military become pregnant each year. DOD has responded positively to 

most demographic changes by incorporating a number of family-friendly 

benefits; however, opportunities exist to improve current benefits in 

this area. Although DOD has several planned initiatives to assist 

military service members’ spouses who seek employment, it has not 

systematically tracked and assessed the effectiveness of the employment 

assistance services offered at military installations. DOD also has not 

assessed the feasibility, costs, and benefits of offering extended time 

off to new parents as a way to increase retention of trained, 

experienced personnel.



In comparing the types of benefits offered by the military with those 

offered in the private sector, we did not identify significant gaps in 

the benefits available to military personnel. We did not make direct 

comparisons between individual military and private-sector benefits but 

did determine that all the core benefits offered by most private-sector 

firms--retirement pay, health care, life insurance, and paid time off-

-are offered by the military. In fact, military benefits in some cases 

exceed those offered by the private sector. These include free health 

care for members, free housing or housing allowances, and discount 

shopping at commissaries and exchanges. During the 1990s, some service 
members 

expressed concerns that their benefits were eroding, particularly their 

health care and retirement benefits. In response to such concerns, the 

military benefit package has been enhanced. In recent years, for 

example, Congress restored retirement benefits that had previously been 

reduced for some service members and significantly expanded health 

benefits.[Footnote 4]



We are recommending that DOD expand measures to systematically track 

and assess the effectiveness of the employment assistance services 

provided to spouses at military installations and assess the 

feasibility, costs, and benefits of offering extended time off for 

parents to care for their children.



In commenting on a draft of this report, DOD concurred with our 

recommendation concerning spousal employment assistance. DOD partially 

concurred with our recommendation concerning extended time off for 

parents and stated that it has contracted a study to evaluate the 

feasibility of implementing an extended leave program for active duty 

military members, including an assessment of extended leave for 

new parents.



Background:



The basic goals of the military’s compensation system are to attract, 

retain, and motivate the number and quality of people needed to 

maintain national security. In fiscal year 2002, Congress appropriated 

more than $100 billion in compensation for military personnel.[Footnote 

5] DOD is the single largest employer and trainer of youth and 

recruited about 196,000 individuals into active duty in 2001. Although 

a unique institution, the military nevertheless competes with academia 

and other organizations for qualified people. The military may face 

increased competition for qualified people over the next few years 

because of continued increases in the number of high school graduates 

going on to college and labor shortages projected through at least 

2010. The U.S. Department of Education projects that the number of high 

school graduates will increase by 11 percent by 2010-2011, and 

enrollment in degree-granting institutions is predicted to increase 

20 percent by 2011. The Bureau of Labor Statistics projects that the 

civilian labor force will increase by 12 percent by 2010, while total 

employment will increase by 15 percent.



In May 2002, DOD issued a strategic human capital plan addressing 

quality-of-life issues and benefits. The plan, entitled A New Social 

Compact: A Reciprocal Partnership Between the Department of Defense, 

Service Members and Families, emerged in response to a presidential 

directive requiring the Secretary of Defense to review measures for 

improving the quality of life for military personnel and to provide 

recommendations for their implementation. According to DOD officials, 

the Social Compact is needed to ameliorate the demands of the military 

lifestyle, which includes frequent separations and relocations, and to 

provide better support to service members and their families. The 

Social Compact focuses on the efforts DOD has or plans to make to 

improve housing, education, health care, work-life issues, and family 

and community support for service members and their families. It 

emphasizes the need to maintain programs and services viewed as 

benefits by service members.



The Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness has 

oversight of career development, recruitment, and pays and benefits for 

active duty personnel. Within this office, the Assistant Secretary of 

Defense for Force Management Policy develops policies, plans, and 

programs for military personnel management, including quality-of-life 

issues for service members and their dependents. The Deputy Assistant 

Secretary of Defense for Military Community and Family Policy is 

responsible for policies and programs that establish and support 

programs such as child care, spousal employment assistance, and other 

family support programs.



DOD’s Benefits Reflect Demographic Changes in the Active Force:



The active duty force has undergone several demographic changes since 

the end of the draft and the advent of an all-volunteer force in 1973. 

It has become older and better educated, it has experienced increases 

in the representation of minority and female service members, and a 

greater proportion of its service members are married and have 

children. Recognizing that a family’s satisfaction with military life 

can influence retention, Congress and DOD have responded by 

establishing and increasing support services for military families. 

However, opportunities exist to further improve benefits in this area.



Composition of the Force Has Changed:



The percentage of personnel over age 25 increased from about 

40 percent of the active duty force in 1974 to nearly 55 percent in 

2000. The proportion of enlisted personnel with at least a high school 

diploma increased from about 80 percent of the enlisted force in 1974 

to about 95 percent in 2000. During that time period, the percentage of 

officers attaining a degree beyond a bachelor’s degree increased from 

25 percent to 43 percent of all officers. The proportion of minority 

service members increased from 20 percent to 35 percent of the active 

duty force between 1974 and 2000, and the proportion of female service 

members increased from 4 percent to 15 percent.



Although reliable data on married personnel is not available for 

1973-77, various DOD studies cite statistics showing that the 

percentage of married enlisted personnel increased from approximately 

40 percent of the force in 1973 to approximately 50 percent in 1977. 

After dropping slightly from 1977 to 1980, the marriage rate rose again 

through the mid-1990s. For each year between 1980 and 2000, married 

service members, including both enlisted personnel and officers, made 

up at least half of the active duty force. DOD attributes the rate 

increases to the gradual aging of the active duty force.



Other DOD data also indicates growth in the proportion of service 

members who have family obligations. The percentage of service 

members with children increased from 43 percent to 45 percent 

between 1990 and 2000, while the proportion of single service members 

with children increased from 4 percent to 6 percent. Figure 1 shows 

the composition of the active duty force, by family status, in 2000. 

(See app. II for additional information on demographic changes in 

the active duty military.):



Figure 1: Composition of Active Duty Force by Family Status (as of 

Sept. 2000):



[See PDF for image]



Notes:



“Joint-service” refers to marriages where the active duty member is 

married to another active duty member or to a reservist.



Percentages do not add up to 100 due to rounding.



Source: Profile of the Military Community: 2000 Demographics Report, 

Department of Defense.



[End of figure]



Congress and DOD Have Responded Positively to Demographic Changes:



Congress and DOD have responded positively to the growth in the 

proportion of service members with family obligations by authorizing 

and implementing a number of family-friendly benefits. Research has 

shown that family satisfaction with military life can influence a 

service member’s decision whether to remain in the military. 

Consequently, Congress has authorized, and DOD instituted, a number of 

services to support military families. The Military Family Act of 1985 

established a spousal employment assistance program.[Footnote 6] In 

1989, Congress directed DOD to establish a relocation assistance 

program.[Footnote 7] In 1992, DOD established guidance for 

implementing, overseeing, staffing, and funding family support centers 

at installations to deliver programs such as personal financial 

management training, employment assistance, relocation assistance, 

deployment assistance, and child and spouse abuse 

prevention programs.[Footnote 8]



Health care benefits for military families have also been enhanced. For 

example, Congress recently eliminated most copayments for active duty 

families enrolled in DOD’s managed health care program and extended 

benefits for dependents living with a member of the uniformed services 

in remote areas.[Footnote 9] In the area of education, Congress 

authorized DOD in the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 

Year 2002 to grant reenlisting service members who possess critical 

skills the option to transfer a portion of their educational assistance 

benefits to their spouse and dependents.[Footnote 10] With respect to 

child care, DOD has made progress improving the quality, availability, 

and affordability of military child care. DOD is working to expand 

capacity to meet a range of child care needs, including initiatives to 

extend care hours, subsidize the cost of obtaining child care at 

commercial centers, offer cash incentives to increase the number of 

family child care providers, and construct additional child development 

centers on installations.[Footnote 11] Lastly, DOD has identified a 

need to reach out to the two-thirds of military personnel and their 

families who reside off of installations, to make them aware of their 

benefits, and to deliver services to them. One approach DOD is taking 

is to increase its use of the Internet by adding information and 

transactional features to Web sites.



Opportunities Exist to Further Improve Benefits:



Although a number of family-friendly benefits are available to active 

duty service members, opportunities exist to improve current benefits 

in this area that could aid in the retention of military personnel. DOD 

has planned initiatives for expanding its spousal employment assistance 

program but lacks information on the effectiveness of employment 

assistance services offered at installations. DOD authorizes 6 weeks of 

paid leave for new mothers but does not offer extended time off for the 

care of newborn or adopted children.



Spousal Employment Assistance:



DOD has begun to pay increased attention to employment assistance 

for the military’s 700,000 spouses, who must move frequently (on 

average every 2 years) with their spouses to different parts of the 

country or the world and face many challenges when trying to find work. 

Many service members are in dual-income households, with spouses 

contributing on average about 25 percent of the family’s income. In 

1999, 48 percent of officers’ spouses and 55 percent of enlisted 

members’ spouses were employed in the civilian labor force, while 

7 percent of officers’ spouses and 8 percent of enlisted members’ 

spouses were unemployed and seeking work.



Many working spouses are underemployed. According to a 2002 DOD study, 

the spouses of military service members earn an average of 24 to 

30 percent less than their civilian counterparts. In part, this wage 

differential, which increases for those with higher levels of 

education, is due to local labor market conditions. Some installations 

are located in remote areas characterized by relatively poor labor 

market conditions. Military spouses face several other employment 

challenges, such as frequent relocations that make it difficult to 

sustain a career and accrue retirement benefits. The families of junior 

enlisted personnel face particular financial difficulties as the result 

of housing and transportation costs, the high cost of credit, and child 

care expenses. The income that spouses earn can help to mitigate some 

of these problems. DOD believes spouse employment is necessary for many 

military families to meet basic family expenses.



In the last few years, DOD has taken a number of steps to enhance its 

spousal employment assistance program, which has been in existence 

since 1985.[Footnote 12] DOD held a “spouse employment summit” in 2000 

to identify needed actions. DOD is now focusing on establishing 

partnerships with private-sector employers who can offer jobs with 

“portable tenure,” which enables spouses to relocate and stay with the 

same employer. Other efforts include expanding employment preference 

for spouses working in Europe and establishing partnerships with 

federal agencies to increase private-sector career opportunities. For 

example, DOD is developing a partnership with the Department of Labor 

to resolve issues such as the different state residency and licensing 

requirements for jobs in teaching, nursing, and child care. DOD is 

seeking Labor’s assistance to help spouses who work in these fields 

overcome employment barriers when they relocate. The Navy and the 

Marine Corps have also launched a partnership with a civilian 

employment services firm at two installations. These initiatives are in 

the early stages of development. As a result, it is too early to gauge 

their effectiveness in promoting spousal employment.



At installations, DOD offers services to help active duty military 

spouses find civilian jobs. Services include job searching and career 

planning, skills assessments, training to facilitate entrance into the 

workforce, resume writing, interviewing, and networking. Neither DOD 

nor the services have systematically tracked demand for employment 

assistance at installations or developed outcome oriented performance 

measures to help evaluate which of these kinds of services provided by 

installations contribute most effectively to spousal employment. DOD’s 

Social Compact proposed a number of metrics to measure spousal 

employment and to assess progress made in meeting the goals of the 

spousal employment assistance program. Some of the proposed measures 

would track changes in spousal employment, the percentage of federal 

and DOD jobs filled by military spouses, and the extent to which 

services and policies are standardized. These proposed measures would 

enable DOD to collect useful information on spousal employment issues. 

However, none of them would track the extent that spouses use the 

program or gauge the effectiveness of the services offered (such as 

career counseling, interviewing, and training) in helping spouses find 

jobs appropriate to their knowledge, skills, and abilities. As a 

result, DOD cannot determine which services offered through its spousal 

employment assistance program are most effective in achieving 

programmatic goals.



Extended Time Off for New Parents:



DOD’s Social Compact, the department’s strategic human capital plan for 

quality-of-life issues, states that retaining personnel is essential to 

building and sustaining DOD’s highly skilled workforce. It further 

states that lifestyle values of American workers from which the 

department draws are changing: People want more time for themselves and 

their families, and they want more time at home. Wise employers are 

selectively adopting new practices to strengthen their relationship 

with the workers they want to keep, the Social Compact states. In this 

regard, a benefit that offers the potential for helping the department 

retain trained, experienced personnel is extended time off for new 

parents. Up to 10 percent of active duty female service members become 

pregnant each year, and there were about 75,000 military children under 

age 1 as of March 2001. While new military mothers and fathers may take 

time off after the birth of a child, the military does not offer 

extended time off to new parents. New mothers may take 6 weeks of paid 

convalescent leave, which is similar to sick leave in the private 

sector. Both new mothers and new fathers may also use annual leave. The 

services stated that they do not track information concerning the 

number of women who separate from active duty service because of 

parental responsibilities. We previously reported that of the 28,353 

women without prior military service who enlisted in fiscal year 1993, 

2,074 separated because of pregnancy between the 7th and 48th month of 

enlistment. Another 706 separated because of parenthood. These 

separations accounted for more than one-third of the attrition for 

female enlistees who joined the services in 1993.[Footnote 13] 

Replacing trained, experienced personnel who leave is expensive. DOD 

estimated for fiscal year 1998 that it had spent $35,000 per enlistee 

by the time enlistees had been recruited and trained for 

6 months.[Footnote 14]



The U.S. Coast Guard--which is part of the Department of Transportation 

in peacetime but operates under the Navy during wartime--has offered 

extended time off for new parents since the early 1990s.[Footnote 15] 

The agency’s “care of newborn children” program permits eligible 

officers and enlisted personnel to separate from active duty for a 

period of up to 2 years.[Footnote 16] During the separation period, 

members do not receive pay and benefits, but they may elect to join the 

Coast Guard Reserve and receive reserve pay and benefits. Upon 

completion of their separation period, the members are guaranteed 

reappointment to active duty at the same grade or rate they held when 

they left. Although the program was originally aimed at retaining 

women, other factors such as the emergence of dual-income and single-

parent families, as well as other economic and cultural changes, 

created the need for enhanced family care opportunities for both men 

and women. Of 244 service members separated under the program as of 

June 1999, 133 were women and 111 were men. The Coast Guard found that 

47 percent of members who had separated under the program had returned 

to active duty when their separation period ended.



In comparison, private-sector employers with more than 50 employees are 

required by the Family and Medical Leave Act of 1993[Footnote 17] to 

allow their employees to take 12 weeks of unpaid leave to meet family 

obligations, such as maternity or paternity leave, adoptions, and care 

for a spouse, child, or parent with serious health conditions. The act, 

which also covers federal government civilians but not military 

personnel, does not require private-sector employers to provide paid 

time off. Paid maternity and paternity leave in the private sector 

appears to be rare. In 1997, only 2 percent of employees had access to 

paid family leave programs, according to the Bureau of Labor 

Statistics. Of the nine private-sector companies we contacted, one 

allowed employees to take up to 3 years of unpaid leave after the birth 

of a child and to return to a comparable position. Another company gave 

mothers 12 weeks paid leave with the option to take additional unpaid 

time off. If she returned within 6 months, the company guaranteed her 

position; if she returned after 1 year, the company guaranteed 

employment, but not the same position.



DOD Offers Wide Array of Benefits for Active Duty Service

Members:



On the basis of our analysis, we found no significant gaps between the 

types of benefits offered to active duty service members as part of the 

military’s benefit package and those offered by private-sector 

employers. Most important, DOD offers all four of the core benefits 

that are offered by most private-sector firms. These benefits are 

retirement, health care, life insurance, and paid time off. As shown on 

the following page in figure 2, DOD also offers a wide array of 

additional benefits. (See app. III for a description of selected 

military benefits.) Many private-sector firms offer additional employee 

benefits as well.



On the basis of our prior work on military compensation and 

DOD’s compensation studies, we have noted several difficulties in 

making direct comparisons between military and private-sector 

benefits. Such comparisons must account for (1) the demands of military 

service, such as involuntary relocation, frequent and lengthy 

separations from family, and liability for combat; (2) certain 

principles of military compensation that are absent in the private 

sector, such as the principle that military compensation must work 

equally well during peace or war; (3) the difficulty in identifying 

appropriate private-sector industries and jobs to use as benchmarks for 

the military; (4) difficulties associated with measuring the value of 

employee benefits; and (5) military personnel practices--such as hiring 

primarily at the entry level and “up or out” rules--that are uncommon 

in the private sector.



For these reasons, we did not make direct analytical comparisons 

between individual benefits offered by the military and those offered 

by the private sector. For instance, we did not attempt to determine 

whether the military retirement system is based on certain criteria, 

more or less lucrative than private-sector pension plans. However, we 

sought to identify the types of benefits found in the private sector--

both traditional and emerging benefits--and used this information to 

determine whether there are potential gaps in the benefit package 

offered to active duty service members.



Figure 2: Range of Military Benefits Offered to All Active Duty 

Personnel:



[See PDF for image]



Notes:



The shaded areas of the figure indicate those benefits that are 

typically considered core benefits in the private sector.



This chart is not a comprehensive listing of all benefits offered to 

active duty military personnel.



[End of figure]



Private-sector employers take a great variety of approaches when 

designing their benefit package. Even so, three thematic trends have 

become evident over the last decade or two. Specifically, private-

sector companies are (1) offering a growing number and array of 

benefits--such as long-term care insurance, convenience benefits, and 

elder care assistance--while also making changes to their traditional 

core benefits; (2) introducing more flexibility in their benefit 

packages; and (3) adding benefits to help employees balance work and 

life responsibilities. (See app. IV for information on trends in 

specific benefits offered by private-sector firms.) While private-

sector firms use pay and benefits packages to attract and retain 

employees, they are also concerned about controlling costs. Employers 

increasingly are sharing a growing portion of benefit costs with 

employees, particularly health care costs, while requiring them to 

assume more responsibility for managing their benefits. Some employers 

have reduced certain benefits or ceased to sponsor coverage. We 

recently testified that the availability of employer-sponsored retiree 

health benefits eroded during the late 1990s and that rising cost 

pressures on employers may lead to further erosion of these 

benefits.[Footnote 18]



Like the military, the private sector also has reacted to demographic 

changes in the workforce. Since the 1970s, the American workforce has 

become more educated, more heterogeneous, and older. The numbers of 

dual-earner families, working women, and single parents have increased. 

Employers have reacted by offering benefits aimed at helping employees 

balance work and life demands. Since the 1980s, employers have begun 

offering benefits such as dependent care assistance, parental leave, 

flexible work schedules, and convenience services such as on-site 

credit unions and cafeterias and health promotion programs. Flexible 

schedules that allow employees to adjust the beginning and ending of 

their work day, work more hours per day but shorter weeks, or share a 

job with another part-time employee are some of the ways that employers 

help employees to manage their work and family responsibilities. 

Flexible benefit plans also help employees by allowing them to select 

additional benefits that may help balance work-life priorities.



Our work comparing the military’s overall benefit package with the 

array of benefits in the private sector showed that several military 

benefits have their analogues or counterparts in the private sector. As 

we noted earlier, the military offers benefits in the four core areas; 

however, the military may structure its benefits differently. For 

example, whereas the military retirement system requires 20 years of 

service to be vested, private-sector firms typically have much shorter 

vesting periods or no vesting period at all. However, military 

personnel can begin receiving retirement pay and benefits as soon as 

they attain 20 years of service and retire from active duty, but 

private-sector employees typically must wait until at least age 55. The 

military’s health care benefit (TRICARE) is provided to service members 

and their families through a network of more than 500 military 

treatment facilities, supplemented by civilian providers.[Footnote 19] 

The cost of this care to service members and their dependents is nil or 

minimal. Active duty service members and their families enrolled in 

TRICARE Prime do not pay enrollment fees, annual deductibles, or 

copayments. Family members who use TRICARE Extra pay no enrollment fees 

but are responsible for annual deductibles and cost shares of 

15 percent. Family members who use TRICARE Standard also do not pay 

enrollment fees. However, they pay a cost share of 20 percent plus the 

difference between the TRICARE allowable charge and the doctor’s 

charge. Private-sector firms, in contrast, typically offer individual 

and family health care through private insurers and normally require 

employees to share the cost burden. According to the Bureau of Labor 

Statistics, in 1999, medium and large private-sector employers paid the 

full cost of health coverage for 25 percent of participants with 

individual coverage and 15 percent of those with family coverage. Of 

those participants required to contribute to their health coverage, the 

average monthly cost was approximately $45 for individual coverage and 

$151 for family coverage. In the core benefit area of life insurance, 

DOD offers low-cost rates on group life insurance.



Service members pay $20 a month for the maximum $250,000 coverage. In 

2001, coverage was extended to members’ spouses and eligible 

children.[Footnote 20] Finally, in the core benefit area of paid time 

off, all service members receive 30 days annual leave and may carry 

over as many as 60 days accrued leave to the next year. The military 

offers numerous other forms of paid leave for specific reasons.



In some areas, the military offers benefits that would not normally be 

available to civilians working for private-sector firms. For example, 

service members and their dependents may obtain discount prices by 

shopping at military commissaries (grocery stores) and exchanges 

(department stores). They also have privileges to use an extensive 

array of community facilities to include, among others, fitness 

centers, swimming pools, officer and enlisted clubs, libraries, 

community centers, hobby shops, and golf courses. Some private-sector 

firms offer amenities such as fitness centers and company stores to 

their employees, but few, if any, can match the breadth of facilities 

and programs available on a military installation. It also would be 

rare to find private-sector firms offering, as the military does, free 

housing or housing allowances to all of their employees.



Military benefits, overall, have been enhanced in recent years. During 

the 1990s, some service members expressed concerns that their pay was 

falling behind that in the private sector and that their benefits were 

eroding, particularly their health care and retirement benefits. Such 

perceptions were cited as one cause of the retention problems the 

military was experiencing at that time. Congress subsequently enacted 

legislation to increase military pay and enhance benefits. These 

efforts were aimed at improving the financial well-being and quality of 

life of service members and at addressing recruiting and retention 

problems. For example, Congress approved across-the-board pay raises of 

4.8 percent for fiscal year 2000 and 3.7 percent for fiscal year 2001, 

along with targeted pay raises to mid-level officers and enlisted 

personnel.[Footnote 21] For fiscal year 2002, Congress approved pay 

raises ranging between 5 and 10 percent, depending on pay grade and 

years of service.[Footnote 22] Major enhancements to benefits included 

the restoration of retirement benefits that had been cut:



for military service members who entered military service on or 

after August 1, 1986,[Footnote 23] and increases in the basic housing 

allowance to reduce out-of-pocket housing expenses for service members 

not living in military housing.[Footnote 24]



Conclusions:



Many military spouses want to work, and many families need dual incomes 

to meet basic expenses. However, frequent relocations associated with 

the military lifestyle can hinder spousal employment and decrease 

satisfaction with military life. The ability to assess the 

effectiveness of the employment assistance service offered at military 

installations is one critical step in developing this program. Doing so 

could enable DOD to better target resources and tailor services to meet 

the employment assistance needs of military spouses.



As competition with the private sector for qualified personnel 

increases, DOD must continue to explore and evaluate benefits that 

address changing workforce demographics, help meet mission needs, and 

positively impact recruitment and retention efforts. The majority of 

female service members are in their childbearing years, and up to 

10 percent of servicewomen annually become pregnant while on active 

duty. In addition, the emergence of dual-income and single-parent 

families has created a need for enhanced family care opportunities and 

flexibility for both men and women. The lack of extended time off for 

parents following the birth or adoption of a child could be negatively 

impacting retention. Moreover, replacing trained, experienced 

personnel who leave is expensive. Because DOD does not track the number 

of service members who separate due to parental responsibilities, the 

magnitude of this issue is unknown.



Recommendations for Executive Action:



We recommend that the Secretary of Defense direct the Under Secretary 

of Defense for Personnel and Readiness to:



* develop measures for tracking and assessing the effectiveness of 

installation-level services offered through DOD’s spousal employment 

assistance program and:



* assess the feasibility, costs, and benefits of offering extended time 

off to parents of newborn or adopted children as one way to increase 

retention of trained, experienced personnel.



Agency Comments and Our Evaluation:



In written comments on a draft of this report, DOD concurred with our 

recommendation on tracking and assessing the effectiveness of 

installation-level services offered through DOD’s spousal employment 

assistance program. DOD partially concurred with our recommendation 

to assess the feasibility, costs, and benefits of offering extended 

time off to parents of newborn or adopted children. DOD stated that it 

has contracted a study to evaluate the feasibility of implementing an 

extended leave program for active duty military members. The study will 

review leave programs at private-sector organizations and other 

government agencies, including the U.S. Coast Guard. According to DOD, 

the study will include an assessment of extended leave for new parents, 

as well as other reasons for leaves of absence. The study is scheduled 

for completion by September 30, 2002. We obtained and reviewed a 

project description for the DOD study as well as a status report dated 

August 2002. These documents indicate that DOD plans to address the 

feasibility, costs, and benefits of extended maternity leave. The scope 

of the study, however, is limited to active duty officers and does not 

appear to address parental leave for new fathers. Our recommendation 

was intended to apply to all active duty personnel, including enlisted 

personnel and new fathers. If DOD conducts a follow-up study that 

addresses these groups, then we believe it could satisfy the intent of 

our recommendation.



DOD also provided technical comments that we incorporated as 

appropriate. DOD’s comments are reprinted in appendix V.



Scope and Methodology:



To identify demographic changes in the active duty force after 1973, 

we obtained and analyzed relevant sections of two DOD reports, 

2000 Population Representation in the Military Services and Profile of 

the Military Community: 2000 Demographics Report, as well as additional 

data from the Defense Manpower Data Center. We also obtained and 

analyzed demographic data on the U.S. civilian labor force from the 

Bureau of Labor Statistics. To identify the employee benefits available 

to active duty service members, we reviewed DOD financial management 

regulations, service budget documents, military compensation 

background papers, DOD and service Web sites, and other department 

documents. We also reviewed DOD studies on compensation, human capital, 

and quality of life; research on military families and benefits, and 

our prior studies on military benefits and personnel issues. We 

interviewed officials at the Office of the Secretary of Defense, the 

Army, the Navy, the Air Force, and the Marine Corps, and other 

department officials. Based on our analysis of demographic changes in 

the military, we focused particular attention on family-friendly 

benefits, such as spousal employment assistance and child care.



To gather information on private-sector benefits, we conducted a 

broad literature search of private-sector benefit practices and trends 

and used survey results of medium and large employers from the 

U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics and several human resources consulting 

firms. Sources included the following publications from the Bureau of 

Labor Statistics: Monthly Labor Review, Compensation and Working 

Conditions, and Employee Benefits in Medium and Large Establishments. 

Although the studies we reviewed covered different time periods, 

surveyed different employer populations, and asked different questions-

-thereby resulting in conflicting data on the prevalence of benefits--

their findings generally concurred on trends related to specific 

benefits. We also interviewed representatives from nine companies that 

have been recognized as innovative or effective in strategically 

managing their human capital. The nine companies are Federal Express 

Corp.; IBM Corp.; Marriott International, Inc.; Merck and Co., Inc.; 

Motorola, Inc.; Sears, Roebuck and Company; Southwest Airlines Co.; 

Weyerhaeuser Co.; and Xerox Corp., Documents Solution Group. We 

previously reported on the key principles that underlie these 

companies’ human capital strategies and practices.[Footnote 25] We did 

not make direct analytical comparisons between individual benefits 

offered by the military and those offered by the private sector to 

assess whether military benefits are more or less lucrative than those 

offered by private-sector employers. However, we identified the types 

of benefits found in the private sector--including core benefits and 

emerging benefits--and used this information to determine whether there 

were gaps in the benefit package offered to active duty service 

members.



We conducted our review from March to July 2002 in accordance 

with generally accepted government auditing standards. We obtained 

comments on a draft of this report from DOD and incorporated 

its comments where appropriate.



We are sending copies of this report to the Secretary of Defense. We 

will also make copies available to appropriate congressional committees 

and to other interested parties on request. In addition, the report 

will be available at no charge at the GAO Web site at http://

www.gao.gov.



If you or your staff has any questions regarding this report, please 

call me at (202) 512-5140. Key contributors to this report are listed 

in appendix VI.



Derek B. Stewart

Director, Defense Capabilities and Management:

Signed by Derek B. Stewart:



[End of section]



Appendixes :



Appendix I: Active Duty Pay, Allowances, and Benefits:



This appendix lists active duty pays, allowances, and benefits that we 

identified during our review. We compiled this list from Department of 

Defense (DOD) financial management regulations, service budget 

documents, military compensation background papers, DOD and service Web 

sites, directives, and other department documents.



Table 1: Components of the Military Compensation System:



Pay/allowance/benefit: Basic pay; Major components: [Empty]; 

Subcomponents: [Empty].



Pay/allowance/benefit: Housing; Major components: * Basic allowance for 

housing, domestic; Subcomponents: * Partial-domestic; * Substandard 

family housing; * With dependents; * Without dependents.



Major components: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Basic allowance for 

housing, overseas; Subcomponents: Pay/allowance/benefit : * With 

dependents; * Without dependents.



Major components: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Government housing; 

Subcomponents: Pay/allowance/benefit : [Empty].



Pay/allowance/benefit: Subsistence; Major components: * Basic 

allowance for subsistence; Subcomponents: * Augmentation for separate 

meals; * Authorized to mess separately; * Leave rations; * Partial; * 

Rations-in-kind not available.



Major components: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Subsistence-in-kind; 

Subcomponents: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Subsistence in messes; * Food 

service regionalization; * Special rations; * Operational rations; * 

Augmentation rations; * Sale of meals.



Major components: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Family subsistence 

supplemental allowance; Subcomponents: Pay/allowance/benefit : 

[Empty].



Pay/allowance/benefit: Continental United States cost of living 

allowance; Major components: [Empty]; Subcomponents: [Empty].



Pay/allowance/benefit: Incentive pay, hazardous duty, and aviation 

career pay; Major components: * Chemical munitions; * Dangerous viruses 

(or bacteria) lab duty pay; * Demolition pay; * Flight deck duty pay; * 

Experimental stress duty pay; Subcomponents: [Empty].



Major components: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Flying duty pay; 

Subcomponents: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Aviation career, officers; * 

Aviator continuation pay; * Career enlisted flyer pay; * Crew members, 

enlisted; * Crew nonrated; * Noncrew member.



Major components: Pay/allowance/benefit : * High-altitude low-opening 

pay; * Parachute jumping pay; * Special warfare officer pay (extended 

active duty); Subcomponents: Pay/allowance/benefit : [Empty].



Major components: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Submarine duty pay; 

Subcomponents: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Continuous monthly submarine 

duty pay; * Incentive pay for operational submarine duty.



Major components: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Surface warfare officer 

continuation pay; * Toxic fuels (or propellants) duty pay; * Toxic 

pesticides duty pay; Subcomponents: Pay/allowance/benefit : [Empty].



Pay/allowance/benefit: Special pay; Major components: * Biomedical 

science; * Civil engineer corps accession bonus; Subcomponents: 

[Empty].



Major components: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Dental officers; 

Subcomponents: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Accession bonus; * Additional 

special pay; * Board-certified pay; * Multiyear retention bonus; * 

Variable special pay.



Major components: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Diving duty pay; * 

Enlistment bonus; * Foreign language proficiency pay; * Hardship duty 

pay; * High-deployment per-diem allowance; * Hostile fire pay/imminent 

danger pay; * Judge advocate continuation pay; Subcomponents: Pay/

allowance/benefit : [Empty].



Major components: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Medical officers; 

Subcomponents: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Additional special pay; * 

Board-certified pay for nonphysician health care providers; * Board-

certified pay; * Diplomate pay for psychologists; * Incentive special 

pay; * Medical officer retention bonus; * Multiyear special pay; * 

Variable special pay.



Major components: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Optometrists; ; * Nuclear 

accession bonus; * Nuclear officer incentive pay; Subcomponents: Pay/

allowance/benefit : * Monthly special pay.



Major components: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Nurse corps officers; 

Subcomponents: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Incentive special pay for 

certified registered nurse anesthetists; * Registered nurse accession 

bonus.



Major components: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Pharmacy medical; 

Subcomponents: Pay/allowance/benefit : [Empty].



Major components: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Reenlistment bonus; 

Subcomponents: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Regular; * Selective.



Major components: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Responsibility pay; * 

Scientific/engineering bonus; Subcomponents: Pay/allowance/benefit : 

[Empty].



Major components: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Sea and foreign duty; 

Subcomponents: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Duty at certain places; * 

Overseas extension pay; * Sea duty.



Major components: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Special duty assignment 

pay; Subcomponents: Pay/allowance/benefit : [Empty].



Major components: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Veterinarians; 

Subcomponents: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Monthly special pay; * 

Diplomate pay.



Pay/allowance/benefit: Relocation; Major components: * Dependent 

travel allowance; * Dislocation and departure allowances; * Personal 

money allowance; * Storage of personally owned vehicle; Subcomponents: 

[Empty].



Major components: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Reimbursement for pet 

quarantine fees; Subcomponents: Pay/allowance/benefit : [Empty].



Major components: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Family separation 

allowance; Subcomponents: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Afloat; * On 

permanent change of station, no government quarters; * On permanent 

change of station, dependents not authorized; * On temporary duty.



Major components: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Permanent change of station 

travel allowances; Subcomponents: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Accession 

travel; * In-place consecutive overseas tours and overseas tour 

extension incentive program; * Nontemporary storage; * Operational 

travel; * Rotational travel; * Separation travel; * Temporary lodging 

facilities; * Training travel; * Travel of organized units.



Major components: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Station allowances, 

overseas; Subcomponents: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Cost-of-living, 

bachelor; * Cost-of-living, regular; * Interim housing allowance; * 

Moving-in housing; * Temporary lodging.



Pay/allowance/benefit: Temporary duty travel allowances; Major 

components: * Actual expense allowance; * Miscellaneous reimbursable 

expenses (taxi fares, tolls, etc.); * Monetary allowance in lieu of 

transportation; * Reimbursement for cost of transportation; * 

Subsistence allowance; Subcomponents: [Empty].



Pay/allowance/benefit: Uniform or clothing allowances; Major 

components: * Cash clothing replacement; Subcomponents: * Basic; * 

Special; * Standard.



Major components: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Extra clothing; 

Subcomponents: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Civilian clothing allowances 

for officers and enlisted personnel clothing allowances; * 

Supplementary; * Temporary duty civilian.



Major components: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Initial clothing; 

Subcomponents: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Special initial clothing; * 

Standard initial clothing.



Major components: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Miscellaneous clothing 

provision; Subcomponents: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Lost or damaged 

clothing.



Pay/allowance/benefit: Children and youth programs; Major components: * 

Child development system; Subcomponents: * Child development center; * 

Family child care; * Resource and referral programs; * School-age care 

programs.



Major components: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Youth programs; 

Subcomponents: Pay/allowance/benefit : [Empty].



Pay/allowance/benefit: Death and burial benefits; Major components: * 

Burial benefits; * Burial costs; * Continued health benefits for 

surviving family members; * Continued privileges at commissaries, 

exchanges, and other installation facilities for families; * Continued 

government housing or housing allowance for families; * Death gratuity 

payments; * Dependency and indemnity compensation; * Federal income tax 

exemption; * Funeral honors; * Montgomery GI Bill death benefit; * 

Payment for unused leave; * Survivor and dependent education; 

Subcomponents: [Empty].



Pay/allowance/benefit: Dependent education; Major components: * DOD 

dependent schools; * DOD domestic dependent elementary and secondary 

schools; Subcomponents: [Empty].



Pay/allowance/benefit: Disability benefits; Major components: * 

Disability retired pay; * Disability severance pay; * Veterans Affairs 

disability compensation; * Veterans Affairs disability pension; 

Subcomponents: [Empty].



Pay/allowance/benefit: Discount shopping; Major components: * 

Commissaries; * Military exchanges; Subcomponents: [Empty].



Pay/allowance/benefit: Education assistance; Major components: * Adult 

continuing education; * Army and Navy college funds; * Basic skills 

education; Subcomponents: [Empty].



Major components: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Commissioning programs; 

Subcomponents: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Direct commissioning; * 

Officer Candidate School/Officer Training School; * Reserve Officer 

Training Corps; * Service academies.



Major components: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Education savings plan; * 

Montgomery GI Bill; * Navy College Assistance/Student Headstart; * 

Student loan repayment; * Technical/vocational programs; * Tuition 

assistance; Subcomponents: Pay/allowance/benefit : [Empty].



Pay/allowance/benefit: Family support services; Major components: * 

Chaplains; * Counseling; * Crisis assistance; * Deployment and 

mobilization assistance; * Exceptional Family Member Program; * Family 

advocacy programs; * Family life education; * Information and referral 

services; * Parenting programs; * Personal finance management; * 

Relocation Assistance Program; * Sexual Assault Victim Intervention 

Program; * Spouse Employment Assistance Program; * Transition 

Assistance Program; Subcomponents: [Empty].



Pay/allowance/benefit: Health care; Major components: * TRICARE; 

Subcomponents: * Prime; * Extra; * Standard; * Dental plan; * 

Prescription plan; * Special needs dependents.



Major components: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Continued health care 

benefit program for separating service members; Subcomponents: Pay/

allowance/benefit : [Empty].



Pay/allowance/benefit: Life insurance; Major components: * Service 

Members’ Group Life Insurance; * Supplemental Survivor Benefit Plan; * 

Survivor Benefit Plan; * Veterans’ Group Life Insurance; Subcomponents: 

[Empty].



Pay/allowance/benefit: Miscellaneous; Major components: * Adoption 

expenses/reimbursement; * Commuting subsidies; * Legal assistance; * 

Long-term care insurance; * Space available travel; * Transition 

assistance; * Veterans Affairs guaranteed home loan program; * Veterans 

Affairs, other; Subcomponents: [Empty].



Pay/allowance/benefit: Paid time off; Major components: * Absence over 

leave or liberty; * Administrative absence; * Advance leave; * Annual 

leave; * Convalescent leave; * Educational leave of absence; * 

Emergency leave; * Environmental and morale leave programs; * Excess 

leave; * Graduation leave; * Leave awaiting orders as a result of 

disability proceedings; * Leave in conjunction with permanent change of 

station; * Leave in conjunction with temporary duty; * Leave travel in 

connection with consecutive overseas assignments; * Liberty pass; * 

Proceed time; * Public holidays; * Reenlistment leave; * Rest and 

recuperation absence for qualified enlisted service members extending 

duty at designated locations overseas; * Rest and recuperation program; 

* Sick-in-quarters; * Special leave accrual for service members 

assigned to hostile fire or imminent danger areas, certain deployable 

ships, mobile units, or other duty; * Special liberty pass; 

Subcomponents: [Empty].



Pay/allowance/benefit: Privileges at military facilities; Major 

components: * Auto, crafts, and hobby shops; * Consolidated package 

stores; * Family, youth, and community centers; * Laundry and dry-

cleaning services; * Libraries; * Movie theaters; * Morale, welfare, 

and recreation deployment support; * Officer, noncommissioned officer, 

and enlisted clubs; * Open messes; * Recreation and fitness facilities 

and services; * Transient quarters; Subcomponents: [Empty].



Pay/allowance/benefit: Retirement/savings benefits; Major components: 

* Armed forces retirement home; * Continued privileges at military 

installations after retirement; Subcomponents: [Empty].



Major components: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Retirement; Subcomponents: 

Pay/allowance/benefit : * High-3 plan; * Redux/career status bonus 

choice; * Final basic pay.



Major components: Pay/allowance/benefit : * Uniformed services savings 

deposit program; * Thrift savings plan; * Travel of family members to 

place of retirement; * Travel, shipment, and storage of household goods 

for retirees; * TRICARE for retirees and their family members; * 

Veterans benefits for retirees; Subcomponents: Pay/allowance/benefit : 

[Empty].



Source: GAO analysis.



[End of table]



[End of section]



Appendix II: Demographic Trends in the Active Duty Military:



This appendix shows demographic changes that have occurred in the 

active duty military since 1973, when the draft ended and the military 

became an all-volunteer force. The appendix also shows selected 

demographic changes that have occurred in the U.S. civilian labor 

force. In cases where data was not available going back to 1974, we 

went back as far as possible.



The active duty force has undergone several demographic changes since 

the military became an all-volunteer force in 1973. It has become older 

and better educated, and it has seen increases in the representation of 

minority and female service members (see figs. 3-5).



Figure 3: Composition of the Active Duty Force by Age Group 

(1974-2000):



[See PDF for image]



Note: Percentages may not add to 100 due to data coded as “unknown.”:



Source: GAO analysis of DOD data.



[End of figure]



Figure 4: Education Levels of the Active Duty Force (1974-2000):



[See PDF for image]



Note: Data excludes warrant officers.



Source: GAO analysis of DOD data.



[End of figure]



Figure 5: Minority and Female Representation in the Active Duty Force 

(1974-2000):



[See PDF for image]



Note: Minority groups include African-American, Hispanic, Native 

American/Alaskan Native, and Asian-American/Pacific Islander.



Source: GAO analysis of DOD data.



[End of figure]



Some of the demographic changes in the active duty military generally 

reflect trends in the U.S. civilian labor force during this time period 

(see figs. 6-8).



Figure 6: Median Age of Employed U.S. Civilians (1974-2000):



[See PDF for image]



Source: GAO analysis of Bureau of Labor Statistics data.



[End of figure]



Figure 7: Education Level of U.S. Civilian Labor Force (1992-2000)	:



[See PDF for image]



Note: The Bureau of Labor Statistics did not track this data prior to 

1992.



Source: GAO analysis of Bureau of Labor Statistics data.



[End of figure]



Figure 8: Minority and Female Representation in the U.S. Civilian Labor 

Force (1974-2000):



[See PDF for image]



Note: Data for minorities includes workers who are black or of Hispanic 

origin.



Source: GAO analysis of Bureau of Labor Statistics data.



[End of figure]



Although reliable data on married military personnel is not available 

for 1973-77, various DOD studies cite statistics showing that the 

percentage of married enlisted personnel increased from approximately 

40 percent of the force in 1973 to approximately 50 percent in 1977. 

After dropping slightly from 1977 to 1980, the enlisted marriage rate 

rose again through the mid-1990s. The overall marriage rate--including 

both enlisted personnel and officers--has remained at 50 percent or 

higher since 1980 (see fig. 9).



Figure 9: Marriage Rates in the Active Duty Military (1980-2000):



[See PDF for image]



Source: DOD.



[End of figure]



In the U.S. civilian labor force, the proportion of married workers 

decreased between 1974 and 2000 (see fig. 10).



Figure 10: Marriage Rates in the U.S. Civilian Labor Force (1976-2000):



[See PDF for image]



Source: GAO analysis of Bureau of Labor Statistics data.



[End of figure]



[End of section]



Appendix III: Selected Employee Benefits for Active Duty Service 

Members:



This appendix summarizes selected benefits that the federal government 

provides to active duty service members and their dependents. DOD lacks 

an authoritative listing of its employee benefits. To compile this 

list, we drew from several sources, including DOD and service 

directives, background papers, studies, and Web sites.



Child and Youth Programs:



Child Development System:



Members with children or custodial rights can obtain child care through 

a variety of DOD-sponsored programs tailored for children ages 6 weeks 

to 12 years. These programs include accredited, centralized on-

installation care; on-or off-installation in-home care by certified 

providers (usually military spouses) as well as extended hour, ill-

child, and hourly care; before-and after-school programs and holidays 

and summer vacation care for school-age children; and resource and 

referral programs. The government subsidizes many care options. The 

military services may offer discounts of up to 20 percent to service 

members who have more than one child enrolled in centralized on-

installation care.



Exceptional Family Member Program:



The Exceptional Family Member Program is a mandatory enrollment program 

for active duty members with family members who have exceptional 

medical needs or learning disabilities that require special medical 

treatment, education, or counseling. The primary goal of the program is 

to assist service members in providing for the special needs of their 

exceptional family members before, during, and after relocation 

required by the change of duty assignment. Although support varies by 

installation, typical programs help families access and use various 

medical and social services and educational programs, obtain 

information and referrals, coordinate assignments, and confirm the 

availability of required services when reassigned. In January 2001, DOD 

launched an Internet site, the Special Needs Network, to help members 

and their families research assignments and connect with care 

coordinators and service providers.



Youth Programs:



Youth programs provide service members’ children ages 12 to 18 

with social, recreation, and athletic programs at more than 470 youth 

facilities at 280 geographic locations worldwide. Military youth may 

participate in 4-H, Boys and Girls Clubs activities, and team sports, 

as well as activities such as parties, support groups, and community 

services offered through teen centers. In addition, a youth sponsorship 

program, supplemented by a military teen Web site--Military Teens on 

the Move--helps military youth acclimate to frequent relocations. DOD 

recently expanded its youth program to focus on school-age care, at-

risk behaviors, and prevention programs.



Death and Burial Benefits:



Burial Benefits:



The Department of Veterans Affairs will provide a casket, a government 

headstone or marker, and a burial flag at no cost to a deceased service 

member or veteran. In addition, service members and veterans who have 

completed service requirements are eligible for burial in a Department 

of Veterans Affairs national cemetery. Reserve component members 

entitled to retired pay as a result of 20 years of creditable service 

are also eligible, as are spouses and minor children of eligible 

veterans and service members. The National Defense Authorization Act 

for Fiscal Year 2002 authorizes a travel allowance for family members 

to attend burial ceremonies for deceased members who die while on 

duty.[Footnote 26]



Burial Costs:



DOD reimburses up to $4,850 for a member’s burial expenses, depending 

on the type of arrangements. DOD also provides travel for next of kin. 

In addition, the Department of Veterans Affairs will pay a burial 

allowance of up to $2,000 if the veteran’s death is service-connected. 

In some cases, it also will pay the cost of transporting the remains of 

a service-disabled veteran to the national cemetery with available 

gravesites that is nearest the home of the deceased. In certain 

instances, the Department of Veterans Affairs will pay a $300 plot 

allowance when a veteran is buried in a cemetery that is not under 

U.S. jurisdiction.



Continued Health Benefits for Surviving Family Members:



Surviving family members of a deceased active duty service member 

remain eligible for health care benefits under TRICARE at active duty 

dependent rates for a 3-year period following the service member’s 

death.[Footnote 27] According to DOD, they may choose to enroll or 

remain enrolled in TRICARE Prime, where available, with no enrollment 

fees and no cost-shares or deductibles. At the end of the 3-year 

period, their TRICARE eligibility continues at the retiree dependent 

rates.



Continued Military Privileges for Surviving Family Members:



The unmarried surviving spouse and qualified dependents of a deceased 

member are eligible for unlimited shopping privileges at military 

commissaries and exchanges. Survivors of a service member who dies 

while on active duty are provided rent-free government housing for 

180 days after the death of the service member or a tax-free housing 

allowance for that portion of the 180-day period when they are not in 

government housing. The amount of the allowance is based on the 

member’s grade at the time of death.



Death Gratuity Payments:



Survivors of a service member who dies while in active service and 

retirees who die within 120 days of retirement as a result of a 

service-connected injury or illness receive an immediate cash payment 

of $6,000. This payment is to assist in meeting financial needs before 

survivor benefits, if any, become available.



Dependency and Indemnity Compensation:



The Department of Veterans Affairs provides a monthly nontaxable 

payment to the unremarried surviving spouse of a service member who 

dies from a service-connected disability. Payment also may be provided 

to a member’s unmarried children under age 18, to children between ages 

18 and 23 if attending a Veterans Affairs-approved school, to disabled 

children, and to the parents of a deceased service member if they meet 

certain income requirements. The surviving spouse of a service member 

who died after January 1, 1993, receives $935 a month, plus $234 for 

each dependent child. The monthly payment for parents of deceased 

veterans varies with their income.



Funeral Honors:



DOD provides an honor guard detail for the burial of an eligible 

veteran, folding and presentation of the American flag to the next of 

kin, and playing of “Taps” during the burial of current and former 

active duty and Selected Reserve members.



Montgomery GI Bill Death Benefit:



The Department of Veterans Affairs will pay a designated survivor a 

special Montgomery GI Bill[Footnote 28] cash death benefit in the event 

of the service-connected death of an individual while he or she is on 

active duty or within 1 year after his or her discharge or release. The 

deceased must either have been entitled to educational assistance under 

the Montgomery GI Bill program or have been a program participant who 

would have been entitled, except for the high school diploma or length-

of-service requirement.



Survivor and Dependent Education:



Surviving spouses and children are eligible for up to 45 months of 

education benefits to be used for associate, bachelor, or graduate 

degrees; courses leading to a certificate or diploma from business, 

technical, or vocational schools; and apprenticeships. Payments to a 

spouse end 10 years from the date the individual is found eligible or 

from the date of the death of the veteran. Spouses who have passed the 

period of eligibility may be eligible for education loans. During the 

first 2 years after the end of their eligibility period, eligible 

spouses may borrow up to $2,500 per academic year to continue a full-

time course leading to a college degree or to a professional or 

vocational objective that requires at least 6 months to complete. 

Children are eligible to receive education benefits between their 18th 

and 26th birthdays. Monthly payments of $670 for full-time attendance 

at educational institutions and lesser amounts for part-time attendance 

are available. Loans are based on financial need.



Tax Benefits:



When a member of the Armed Forces dies while in a combat zone in active 

service, or as a result of wounds, disease, or injury while so serving, 

special tax forgiveness rules apply. Additionally, special favorable 

tax rules apply when an individual dies as a result of wounds or injury 

that was incurred outside the United States in a terroristic or 

military action.[Footnote 29] Generally, benefits received from the 

Department of Veterans Affairs by a survivor of a deceased member are 

exempt from levy by the United States or any agency thereof with 

respect to indebtedness the deceased may have had to the United 

States.[Footnote 30]



Unused Leave:



Survivors of a deceased member are entitled to payment for the 

deceased’s unused accrued leave, if any. The amount of the payment is 

based on the member’s basic pay at the time of death.



Disability:



Veterans Disability Compensation:



The Department of Veterans Affairs offers tax-free monthly payments 

to a member who has a service-connected disability. The amount of the 

payment varies based on the extent of disability, the veteran’s marital 

status, and the number of dependents. In 2002, monthly payments 

ranged from $103 to $2,163 plus allowances for spouse and children 

where applicable.



Veterans Disability Pension:



The Department of Veterans Affairs offers monthly payments to eligible 

wartime veterans with limited income, a permanent disability, and an 

inability to work. Payments vary according to the veteran’s income, 

number of family members, and capacity for self-care. If a veteran is 

receiving any income, an equivalent offset is subtracted from this 

payment. The annual basic pension for a single veteran in 2002 was 

$9,556. A veteran with one dependent received $12,516. For each 

additional dependent, the pension increased by $1,603.



DOD Disability Retirement Pay:



A service member may qualify for disability retirement pay if the 

member has a permanent and stable disability that is not the result of 

intentional misconduct or willful neglect and the member has at least 

20 years of service. If the member does not have 20 years of service, 

the member may still qualify for disability retirement if the 

disability is at least 30 percent and meets certain other 

criteria.[Footnote 31]



DOD Disability Severance Pay:



Members with less than 20 years of active service who are separated 

from active duty because of service-connected minor disabilities are 

eligible to receive a lump-sum payment. This lump-sum payment is 

directed at members who are less than 30 percent disabled and 

physically unable to perform the military duties of their respective 

office or grade. Payments are based on 2 months’ basic pay for each 

year of active service, not to exceed 12 years’ basic pay.[Footnote 32]



Discount Shopping:



Commissaries:



Active duty service members, their dependents, and retirees can 

purchase discounted grocery items at more than 280 commissaries 

worldwide. Because commissaries sell food and household items free of 

local sales tax and at cost, plus a 5-percent surcharge to help defray 

operational expenses, customers can save more than 30 percent on their 

purchases compared to commercial supermarkets. According to DOD, a 

family of four can save about $2,400 annually by shopping at 

a commissary.



Military Exchanges:



Active duty service members, their dependents, and retirees may 

purchase a variety of goods and services at 1,522 military exchanges 

worldwide. Exchanges are similar to department stores, selling apparel, 

footwear, household appliances, jewelry, cosmetics, food, and other 

merchandise. Some exchanges offer gas stations, florist shops, optical 

shops, fast food restaurants, and liquor stores.



Education Assistance:



Education Savings Plan:



The National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2002 authorized 

service secretaries to establish an education savings plan.[Footnote 

33] Service members who sign up for at least another 6 years of active 

duty in a critical skill area may receive a bonus of $5,000 to $30,000 

in U.S. savings bonds. Generally, service members who have completed 

fewer than 3 years of service and who commit to at least 6 years of 

additional service are eligible to receive savings bonds worth $5,000; 

service members who have completed between 3 and 9 years of service and 

make the requisite service commitment are eligible to receive savings 

bonds worth $15,000; and service members who have completed 9 years of 

service are eligible to receive savings bonds worth $30,000 after 

committing to the required additional service.



Montgomery GI Bill:



The Montgomery GI Bill[Footnote 34] provides educational assistance to 

active duty members and veterans who enter active duty after June 30, 

1985. Members may use the assistance for degree and certificate 

programs, as well as for on-the-job training and correspondence 

courses.[Footnote 35]



Eligible individuals upon first becoming members of the Armed Forces or 

first entering on active duty contribute $1,200 through basic pay 

reductions of $100 per month during their first 12 months of service 

unless they make an election not to receive educational assistance 

under the program.[Footnote 36]



Members who choose not to participate in the program must formally 

decline enrollment and, with some exceptions, cannot enroll in the 

program at a later time. Veterans must receive an honorable discharge 

to continue to participate. Educational benefits are available while on 

active duty after meeting active duty service requirements and 

generally for up to 10 years after a veteran’s discharge from active 

duty.[Footnote 37] The amount of payment of educational assistance 

varies depending on the obligated period of active duty upon which the 

entitlement is based.[Footnote 38]



The National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2002 authorizes 

the service Secretaries to allow a service member with critical skills 

or in a military specialty requiring critical military skills who has 

served a minimum of 6 years and who agrees to serve for at least 4 

additional years to transfer up to 18 months of unused basic Montgomery 

GI Bill educational benefits to his or her spouse or children. A 

service member’s spouse may use transferred benefits after the member 

completes the 6 years of service in the Armed Forces. A member’s child 

who is at least 18 years old or has a high school diploma may use 

transferred benefits after the parent completes 10 years of service in 

the Armed Forces. [Footnote 39]



Voluntary Education:



An active duty member who voluntarily enrolls for education or training 

in an educational institution during off-duty time may receive tuition 

assistance. While the services can pay all or a portion of tuition 

costs or expenses, service members may use a portion of their 

Montgomery GI Bill benefits to pay for the remaining tuition. 

Commissioned officers are not eligible for this benefit unless they 

agree to remain on active duty for a period of 2 years after the 

completion of the training or education paid for.[Footnote 40]



Family Support Services:



Deployment and Mobilization Support:



Deployment and mobilization support programs help service members and 

their families prepare for and cope with the challenges associated with 

mobilization, remote assignments, and deployments. Programs address a 

range of issues that may arise prior to, during, and upon return from 

deployments. Programs may include briefings on available support 

services; free telephone, video electronic mail, and teleconferencing 

calls; and benefits such as a free oil change for the family’s personal 

vehicle. Upon return from deployment, commanders may elect to provide 

workshops to help members and their families readjust to life together.



Family Advocacy Programs:



Family Advocacy Programs assist members and their families with 

problems resulting from spouse and child abuse, child neglect, and 

child sexual molestation. These programs offer prevention, 

intervention, and treatment resources at no cost to military family 

members.



Parenting Programs:



Parenting programs help military families address specific problems, 

teach and build skills, enhance family self-sufficiency, and prevent 

child abuse. These voluntary programs include parent education classes 

as well as parent support groups. Two core parenting classes are the 

New Parent Support Program and the Healthy Parenting Initiative. Aimed 

at first-time parents, the New Parent Support Program offers home 

visits by nurses who can answer parents’ questions about infant care. 

The Healthy Parenting Initiative provides resources to deal with 

stressors such as frequent deployments, intermittent single parenting, 

and separation from extended family support networks.



Personal Financial Management Program:



The Personal Financial Management Program provides financial education, 

training, and counseling to members and their families in the areas of 

personal finance, budgeting, debt management, and retirement planning.



Relocation Assistance Program:



The Relocation Assistance Program helps active duty service members and 

their families prepare for moves and adjust to life at new 

installations. The program provides pre-move destination information, 

relocation counseling, and settling-in services. Members located 

overseas may also obtain intercultural training. Typical programs 

address information on the shipment and storage of household goods, 

financial planning, permanent change of station entitlements, and child 

care. A special Web site provides information about more than 300 

military installations. The services may offer additional seminars and 

programs tailored to members’ needs. Such programs include information 

seminars for spouses and new military families and the loan of 

household items for use prior to the arrival of personal 

household goods.



Spouse Employment Assistance Program:



The Spouse Employment Assistance Program provides information and 

referral services to military spouses to facilitate their employment in 

the civilian labor market. These services address various aspects of 

the job search and career planning process, the acquisition of skills 

that will facilitate entrance into the workforce, and the development 

of portable careers. Military spouses also may receive preferential 

consideration for competitive service positions in DOD located outside 

the United States and preference for hiring in positions in 

nonappropriated fund activities. Additionally, spouses of members may 

receive preference in hiring for any position in DOD above grade GS-7 

if the spouse is among persons determined to be best qualified for the 

position and if the position is located in the same geographical area 

as the permanent duty station of the member.[Footnote 41]



Transition Assistance Program:



The Transition Assistance Program provides services to departing 

military members to help them adjust to civilian life and obtain jobs. 

Services include employment assistance, leave, and relocation 

assistance for personnel overseas. Members and their families are 

eligible to use these services for up to 180 days after separation. In 

2001, DOD launched a Web site that offers courses on conducting job 

searches, writing resumes, and using the Internet to find jobs.



Health Care:



Continued Health Care Benefit Program:



Members leaving the military before retirement can purchase health care 

benefits to cover medical bills incurred by them and their families 

while between jobs. The Continued Health Care Benefit Program mirrors 

TRICARE Standard medical coverage. Members who enroll in the program 

within 60 days after separation from active duty or loss of eligibility 

for military health care can purchase coverage for up to 18 months for 

themselves and dependents and up to 36 months for others such as 

unmarried former spouses.



Dental:



Active duty service members are entitled to dental care in more than 

400 military dental treatment facilities on a space available basis. If 

care is unavailable either because the member is remotely located or 

because unavailable specialty care is needed, civilian dentists may 

provide care. Family members may enroll in the TRICARE Dental Program, 

which requires monthly premiums and copayments. For example, basic 

restorative services, such as fillings, are covered at 80 percent, and 

the family member is responsible for the remaining 20 percent of costs. 

It allows up to $1,200 per year for general dentistry and a lifetime 

orthodontic maximum of $1,500 for each enrollee. The dental program 

covers a wide range of diagnostic, preventive, and restorative 

services, including dental x-rays, exams, cleaning, fluoride 

applications, fillings, root canals, and crowns.



TRICARE:



DOD provides health care to active duty members and their dependents 

through TRICARE, a managed care program. Care is provided in more than 

500 military treatment facilities worldwide, supplemented by civilian 

providers. TRICARE offers beneficiaries three health care options: 

Prime, Standard, and Extra. Active duty personnel are required to 

enroll in TRICARE Prime. This program offers care in military treatment 

facilities and does not require enrollment fees or copayments from 

active duty beneficiaries for care or drugs obtained from military 

treatment facilities.



Dependents may choose to enroll in TRICARE Prime where available or may 

elect to receive care under TRICARE Extra, a preferred provider option, 

or under TRICARE Standard, a fee-for-service option. Beneficiaries 

obtaining care under Extra and Standard are subject to deductibles and 

a cost share of 15 or 20 percent, depending on the program enrolled. 

They may also be subject to a $3 charge for generic drugs and a $9 

charge for brand name drugs purchased from the national mail order 

pharmacy or at retail network pharmacies. The charge for nonnetwork 

pharmacies is the greater of $9 or 20 percent of total cost. The 

National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2002[Footnote 42] 

requires the Secretary of Defense to establish a program to provide 

extended benefits to eligible dependents which may include benefits for 

dependents who are mentally retarded, have a serious physical 

disability, or have an extraordinary physical or psychological 

condition. These extended benefits may include comprehensive health 

care services and case management services.



Housing:



Military members are eligible to receive one of three types of housing, 

depending on their rank, marital status, and whether they reside on-or 

off-installations. Military personnel who have one or more family 

members living with them are eligible to apply for and occupy military 

family housing located on installations. Single junior-enlisted members 

are required to live in barracks where they may share a room with a 

communal bathroom and telephone down the hall. Military members living 

off of installations are entitled to a basic housing allowance in order 

to be able to afford housing in the local civilian housing market. This 

allowance is determined by the member’s pay grade and dependency status 

as well as the cost of suitable civilian housing for the member’s 

income level in the geographic area. Members stationed overseas who are 

not furnished government housing are eligible for an overseas housing 

allowance based on dependency status.



Life Insurance:



Service Members’ Group Life Insurance:



Service members’ Group Life Insurance is a government-sponsored program 

that provides insurance coverage to members of the Armed Forces. Under 

the program, active duty members and others automatically are insured 

for $250,000. Members may elect less coverage or no coverage. The 

premium rate, as set by the Secretary of Veterans Affairs, is $20 a 

month for the maximum $250,000 coverage. Monthly premiums for less than 

the maximum coverage are $0.80 per $10,000. Beginning in November 2001, 

coverage was extended to members’ spouses and children.[Footnote 43] 

Service members may purchase up to $100,000 coverage for spouses, but 

no more coverage than is held by the service member. Premiums for 

spouse coverage vary based on actuarial principles. Coverage for 

eligible dependents is free and automatic.



Survivor Benefit Plan:



The Survivor Benefit Plan provides members who reach retirement 

eligibility an opportunity to leave a portion of their retired pay to 

their survivors. The plan complements social security survivor benefits 

with a monthly annuity payment to eligible spouses and dependents. 

Payments equal 55 percent of what the members’ retired pay would have 

been had they been retired. When survivors reach the age of 62, 

payments drop to 35 percent of retired pay. Payments are offset by 

Dependency and Indemnity Compensation and are adjusted annually for 

cost-of-living increases. Under the National Defense Authorization Act 

for Fiscal Year 2002, surviving spouses of some active duty service 

members are also authorized to receive Survivor Benefit Plan 

benefits.[Footnote 44]



Veterans’ Group Life Insurance:



Veterans’ Group Life Insurance provides a maximum of $250,000 renewable 

5-year coverage for members released from active duty. Service members’ 

Group Life Insurance may be converted to this plan. Conversion is 

available to members who have full-time Service members’ Group Life 

Insurance coverage as well as those with part-time coverage under 

certain conditions that render them uninsurable at standard premium 

rates. Members of the Individual Ready Reserve and Inactive National 

Guard may also enroll. Coverage is limited to the maximum amount of 

Service members’ Group Life Insurance held while the service member was 

on active duty or in the Reserves. Veterans’ Group Life Insurance 

premiums range from $11 to $84 per month per $100,000 in coverage, 

varying with the service member’s age.



Miscellaneous:



DOD Dependent Schools:



Children of active duty service members can obtain free elementary 

through high school education at schools located on installations in 

the United States and overseas. DOD Dependent Schools educate more 

than 76,000 military children in 154 schools in 13 countries. Seventy 

Domestic Dependent Elementary and Secondary Schools at 17 installations 

located in seven states, Guam, and Puerto Rico educate more than 34,000 

military children.



Legal Assistance:



Service members and their families can receive free legal advice and 

assistance from judge advocates or civilian attorneys for many 

personal, noncriminal matters. These matters include personal tax 

questions; adoption assistance; child and spouse support; wills, 

estates, and trusts; debts and bankruptcy; notary public services; 

leases; and advice on Soldier and Sailors’ Civil Relief Act[Footnote 

45] protection.



Department of Veterans Affairs Guaranteed Home Loan Program:



Members may obtain guaranteed home loans from the Department of 

Veterans Affairs in order to purchase homes, make home improvements, 

and refinance home loans. These loans require no down payments, limit 

closing costs, provide for assumable mortgages, and allow prepayment 

without penalty. The Department of Veterans Affairs guarantees 

25 percent of home loans up to $50,750; 40 percent of home loans up to 

$36,000; and 50 percent of home loans up to $45,000, subject to the 

amount of the entitlement that the veteran has available. An active 

duty veteran who buys a home pays a funding fee ranging from 1.25 to 

3 percent of the loan amount depending on the amount of the down 

payment and whether the member has other Veterans Affairs loans.



Privileges at Military Facilities (Morale, Welfare, and Recreation):



Service members and their families have access at installations to 

morale, welfare, and recreation programs that are aimed at meeting 

their physical, social, and cultural needs. These programs include 

fitness centers, golf courses, movie theaters or free movies, 

automotive skills development, crafts and hobby programs, guest 

quarters, swimming pools, enlisted clubs, game rooms and arcades, 

coffeehouses, intramural sports, bowling centers, libraries, chapels, 

rifle and pistol ranges, outdoor recreation, and exchanges, 

commissaries, and discounts on special events and off-installation 

recreation areas.



Transportation Incentive Program:



Active duty service members may be eligible to receive reimbursements 

of up to $100 per month for transportation expenses associated with 

using public transportation and van pools when commuting to and 

from work.



Space Available Travel:



Space Available Travel permits military members and their families to 

travel free or for a small fee on military transportation, space 

permitting. Family members may use this benefit to accompany an active 

duty service member on immediate family emergencies and on house-

hunting trips related to a pending permanent change of station move.



Paid Time Off:



Annual leave:



Members accrue leave at the rate of 2-1/2 days per month of active 

service. Members may not accumulate more than 60 days of leave as of 

the end of the fiscal year except when they enter a duty type or 

situation during which it is unlikely that leave may be used.



Convalescent Leave:



Service members who are determined unfit for duty by their commanding 

officer or hospital command receive leave for a period of up to 30 days 

per hospitalization. Following pregnancy, service members normally 

receive 42 days (6 weeks) leave per a doctor’s instructions.



Educational Leave of Absence:



Eligible members may use up to 2 years of leave to pursue an 

educational program. Although members continue to receive basic pay for 

their applicable pay grades and to accrue leave, they do not receive 

housing or other allowances.



Graduation Leave:



Graduates of the military academies may be granted leave of not more 

than 60 days to be used within 3 months of graduation and before 

reporting for permanent duty. This leave does not count against the 

officer’s annual leave.



Public Holidays:



Except when prevented by military operations, members observe U.S. 

public holidays as established by federal statutes.



Sick-in Quarters:



Members may be excused from duty for treatment or medically directed 

self-treatment in homes, barracks, or other nonhospital facilities. 

This leave does not count against annual leave.



Retirement and Savings:



Retirement:



Military members presently are covered by one of three separate 

retirement systems, depending on when they joined the military. All 

three systems require no contribution from the service member, allow 

retirement after 20 years of service, and have no vesting before 

20 years. Benefits received are based on years of service and salary. 

Service members who joined the military before September 8, 1980, are 

covered under the Final Pay plan. This plan bases retired pay on final 

basic pay multiplied by 2.5 percent per year of service less any excess 

over:



75 percent of pay upon which the computation is based.[Footnote 46] 

Service members who joined the military after September 7, 1980, and 

before August 1, 1986, receive retirement benefits under the High-3 

plan. High-3 gives members (1) 50 percent of their average basic pay 

for the highest 3 earning years before retiring at 20 years of service 

and (2) an additional 2.5 percent for each year beyond 20 years of 

service, to a maximum of 75 percent for 30 years of service. Members 

who joined the Armed Forces after July 31, 1986, may choose between the 

High-3 Plan and a revised retirement plan enacted under the Military 

Retirement Reform Act of 1986[Footnote 47] (sometimes referred to as 

Redux) upon reaching their 15th year of service. Under Redux, a member 

who elects to receive a bonus and signs a written agreement to remain 

on active duty until the member has completed 20 years of active duty 

service will receive a $30,000 lump-sum bonus, and must remain in the 

Redux plan.



Thrift Savings Plan (Uniformed Services Plan):



Service members may contribute up to 7 percent of their basic pay in 

the Thrift Savings Plan, a retirement savings and investment program 

that offers participants the same type of savings and tax benefits that 

many private corporations offer their employees under “401(k)” plans. 

The retirement income that service members receive from their accounts 

depends on the amount contributed during working years and the earnings 

on these contributions. Service members may contribute a portion of 

their monthly base pay up to the 2002 Internal Revenue Service limit of 

$11,000 to any or all of five funds. Service members enrolled in the 

plan may also contribute any amount of incentive pay or special pay, 

including bonuses. Service members serving in critical military 

specialties, as designated by service Secretaries, and who agree to 

serve on active duty for 6 years are eligible to receive matching 

contributions of up to 4 percent of basic pay. The government matches 

each of the first 3 percent and half of the next 2 percent.



[End of section]



Appendix IV: Trends in Selected Private-Sector Employee Benefits:



This appendix summarizes trends in selected employee benefits offered 

by medium and large U.S. employers to their full-time 

employees.[Footnote 48] To compile this list, we drew from several 

sources, including the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics’ Monthly Labor 

Review (1989-1991 and 1999-2001), Compensation and Working Conditions 

(1996-1998 and 2000), and Employee Benefits in Medium and Large Private 

Establishments (1995 and 1997); surveys conducted by human resources 

consulting firms;[Footnote 49] and our interviews with representatives 

from nine companies that have been recognized as innovative or 

effective in strategically managing their human capital. Although the 

studies we reviewed covered different time periods, surveyed different 

employer populations, and asked different questions--thereby resulting 

in conflicting data on the prevalence of benefits--their findings 

generally concur on trends related to specific employee benefits.



Accidental Death and Dismemberment:



Accidental death and dismemberment coverage provides benefits in 

addition to existing group life insurance if a covered worker dies or 

is injured as a result of an accident. Coverage is almost always a 

component of group life insurance. However, employees who have the 

option to choose their benefits through a flexible benefits program may 

be able to receive accidental death and dismemberment coverage without 

life insurance. Accidental death and dismemberment benefit payments 

usually equal 100 percent of a worker’s basic life insurance. Plans 

also may pay partial benefits for the accidental loss of an eye, a leg, 

or an arm. In 1999, 57 percent of employees in medium and large 

U.S. companies had accidental death and dismemberment coverage compared 

with 69 percent in 1993.



Child Care Assistance:



Employers sponsor a variety of programs to assist employees with child 

care responsibilities. The range of corporate-sponsored child care has 

continued to grow since the 1980s and now includes on-and off-site 

child care, emergency, sick, and backup child care services when 

regular child care is unavailable; care for mildly ill children or when 

schools are closed due to holidays; referral services; and dependent 

care flexible spending accounts, among other programs. A survey 

conducted by a human resources consulting company found that, in 2000, 

dependent care flexible-spending accounts were the most prevalent form 

of child care assistance, followed by employer-sponsored child care 

resource and referral services. Five of the nine companies we contacted 

offered employees flexible spending accounts for dependent care. In 

1999, 10 percent of employees at medium and large companies had access 

to employer-sponsored or -funded child care either on-site or off-site. 

Few companies--mainly very large corporations--offer before and after 

school care, care during holidays and vacations, or care for mildly ill 

children.



Convenience Benefits:



Convenience benefits are services and products provided at the 

workplace in order to allow employees to perform errands conveniently 

and efficiently, thus helping them better balance their work and home 

responsibilities. Some convenience benefits have existed for some time, 

while others have been implemented only recently. Examples include 

health promotion programs, on-site credit unions, dry cleaning 

services, cafeterias, take-home meals, minor automotive servicing, and 

commuting assistance.[Footnote 50] The prevalence of these services 

varies by type. For example, in 2000, 25 percent of employers 

subsidized employees’ parking and mass transit costs through commuter 

assistance programs, according to a human resources consulting firm. In 

comparison, 66 percent of employers provided on-site credit unions, and 

76 percent provided health promotion programs in 2000.



Elder Care Assistance:



An emerging benefit, elder care assistance, consists of time off--paid 

or unpaid leave--to care for an elderly dependent, employer-paid or 

sponsored adult day care, and resource and referral information. The 

percentage of employers offering elder care assistance has increased 

since the 1990s in part due to the aging workforce and the passage of 

the Family and Medical Leave Act of 1993,[Footnote 51] which requires 

employers to provide up to 12 weeks of unpaid, job-protected leave to 

eligible employees so they may care for a parent who is seriously ill. 

In 1993, 31 percent of employees were eligible for some form of elder 

care benefits, compared with 3 percent in 1989. A human resources 

consulting firm found that 43 percent of surveyed companies offered 

elder care resource and referral programs in 2000, up from 27 percent 

in 1998. The Family and Medical Leave Act of 1993 applied to all nine 

companies we contacted; however, none offered paid time off to care for 

family members.



Employee Assistance Programs:



Employee assistance programs provide information and referrals to help 

employees cope with alcohol and substance abuse, family problems, 

stress, and psychiatric problems. An increasing number of programs also 

provide information and counseling services related to financial 

planning, legal assistance, pre-marriage and marriage counseling, 

college planning, and spouse job placement assistance for relocation. 

Four of the nine companies we contacted offered employee assistance 

programs that included counseling and referral services. According to 

the Bureau of Labor Statistics, 54 percent of employees had access to 

employee assistance programs in 1999.



Flexible Benefits:



Flexible benefits, also called cafeteria plans, allow employees to 

tailor their benefit packages to their specific needs. Companies use 

flexible benefits as one approach to meet the needs of their 

increasingly diverse workforces, while containing costs. Flexible 

benefits allow employees to choose among plans within a given benefit 

area or to design individual benefit packages by selecting specific 

benefits from among several types. Employees may choose from a variety 

of health care and life insurance options, various levels of sickness 

and accident insurance, long-term disability insurance, additional 

vacation and sick leave days, dependent care, adoption assistance, and 

legal assistance benefits. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, 

the percentage of employees in medium and large companies with access 

to flexible benefits increased from 5 percent in 1988 to 13 percent 

in 1999.



Flexible Spending Accounts:



Some companies permit employees to allocate funds for dependent care 

expenses, health care deductibles, coinsurance, and other costs not 

covered by health care plans through flexible spending accounts. These 

accounts provide employees with a pretax savings account into which 

employees deposit a defined amount of money each pay period. According 

to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the percentage of employees in 

medium and large companies eligible for flexible spending accounts 

increased from 12 percent in 1988 to 21 percent in 1999. Eight of the 

nine companies we contacted offered flexible spending accounts to 

offset child or health care expenses.



Flexible Work Arrangements:



Flexible work arrangements give employees greater flexibility in 

choosing the times that they begin and end their workdays and weekly 

schedules. Common types of flexible schedules include job sharing, 

telecommuting, flexible work hours, compensatory time arrangements, and 

gliding schedules that require a specific number of hours of work each 

day but permit employees to vary their arrival and departure times. 

According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, in 1997 approximately 

28 percent of full-time employees had flexible work schedules--almost 

double the percentage in 1985. A survey by a human resources consulting 

firm showed increases in the prevalence of various flexible work 

options between 1998 and 2000. The survey showed, for instance, that 

the percentage of employers offering compressed work weeks increased 

from 42 to 50 percent, telecommuting on a regular basis increased from 

30 to 44 percent, and flextime increased from 36 to 45 percent.



Life Insurance:



Life insurance provides designated beneficiaries with cash payments on 

the death of a family member or other individual. Group life insurance 

coverage for employees is a standard part of most employee benefit 

packages. Plan coverage is most commonly one to two times base salary, 

up to certain dollar limits. The percentage of full-time employees in 

medium and large companies that participated in employee-sponsored life 

insurance plans decreased from 94 percent in 1989 to 70 percent in 

1999. A 2001 survey by a human resources consulting firm found that 

94 percent of the organizations surveyed offered employer-paid life 

insurance for their employees. All nine of the companies we surveyed 

offered life insurance to their employees. At some companies, employees 

have the option of purchasing supplemental life insurance that provides 

additional coverage. Employees usually pay the entire cost of the 

supplemental insurance premiums.



Although few employers pay for life insurance for spouses or 

dependents, some employers offer voluntary life insurance for these 

groups. Generally, employees pay the full cost of this benefit, 

purchasing a minimum of $10,000 for spouse coverage and between $5,000 

and $10,000 for each dependent child. In 2000, 72 percent of employers 

surveyed by a major human resources consulting firm offered this 

benefit, compared with 64 percent in 1996. Eight of the nine companies 

we contacted extend life insurance coverage to their employees’ spouses 

and dependents.



Living benefits are increasingly popular. They provide a portion of 

life insurance benefits to employees who have terminal or long-term 

illnesses. When offered, this benefit is commonly a standard component 

of group life insurance policies rather than an optional benefit rider. 

According to a major human resources consulting firm, the prevalence of 

this benefit increased from 40 percent in 1998 to 46 percent in 2000.



Long-Term Care Insurance:



Employer-sponsored long-term care insurance is an emerging but still 

relatively rare benefit that provides coverage for employees, their 

spouses, and less frequently for parents and grandparents. Long-term 

care insurance policies pay for all or part of long-term custodial and 

maintenance care provided for a period generally longer than 30 days to 

individuals with functional impairments that inhibit total independent 

living. Services are provided by nursing homes and assisted living 

facilities, as well as through home health care, hospice, and respite 

care. Although less common, some policies may cover physical, speech, 

occupational, and respiratory therapies. Employers may offer this 

coverage to employees on a voluntary basis, requiring employees to pay 

the entire premium, but at group rates. Premiums vary by age, with 

older employees paying more than younger employees. Policy costs can 

increase if employees select optional inflation protection that 

automatically increases future benefits based on a schedule. According 

to an insurance association, the number of employers offering long-term 

care insurance as an employee benefit increased from 135 in 1990 to 

about 3,200 in 1999. However, a 1999 study estimated that only 6 to 

9 percent of eligible employees took advantage of employer-provided 

group long-term care insurance where it was available.[Footnote 52] In 

2002, federal employees, active duty service members, selected Reserve 

members, retirees, and qualified family members became eligible to 

obtain long-term care insurance through the federal government.



Health Insurance:



Employers typically offer several types of health care insurance plans. 

The three most common types of plans are health maintenance 

organizations, fee-for-service, and preferred provider organizations. 

According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, 76 percent of full-time 

employees in medium and large firms were covered by their employer’s 

medical care plan in 1997. Of these employees, 33 percent were enrolled 

in health maintenance organizations, up from 17 percent in 1991; 

40 percent were enrolled in preferred provider organizations, compared 

with 16 percent in 1991; and 27 percent were enrolled in fee-for-

service plans in 1997, compared with 67 percent in 1991.



Traditionally, employers have subsidized health insurance heavily. 

However, employees increasingly are paying a greater portion of 

premiums or copayments and deductibles. According to the Bureau of 

Labor Statistics, 75 percent of all full-time employees participating 

in medical plans in 1999 were required to contribute toward the cost of 

individual coverage, compared with 51 percent in 1991. Eighty-

one percent of all employees were required to contribute to the cost of 

family coverage in 1999, compared with 69 percent in 1991. The average 

monthly employee contribution for single coverage in 1999 was $48, 

compared with about $27 in 1991; the average monthly employee 

contribution for family coverage was about $170 in 1999, compared with 

$97 in 1991.



Almost all health plans provide coverage for outpatient prescription 

drugs and require the insured to pay copayments. Today, most plans 

allow employees to obtain long-term supplies of maintenance 

prescription drugs at reduced cost. Two common delivery methods for 

prescription drugs are mail order services for long-term supplies of 

maintenance drugs and a prescription drug card for use at retail 

pharmacies. Because the cost of prescription drugs has increased 

annually by 10 to 15 percent for several years, employers are moving 

toward multiple-tier copay structures where participants pay more for 

brand name drugs than generics, and more for drugs not on the plan’s 

formulary.



Some employers offer limited dental and vision coverage in connection 

with their health insurance plans, the cost of which employees may or 

may not share. Most dental plans cover preventative and restorative 

services such as routine exams, x-rays, fillings, root canal therapy, 

and periodontics within a calendar-year maximum benefit. Some employers 

offer voluntary dental coverage plans. Although these plans provide 

coverage at less costly group rates, employees pay the entire premium. 

According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, in 1999, 43 percent of 

employees participated in dental care plans, compared with 57 percent 

in 1995 and 62 percent in 1993. Fee-for-service plans were the most 

likely to offer dental care, with 85 percent doing so in 1995. In 

contrast, only 8 percent of health maintenance organizations offered 

dental coverage in 1995. Vision care benefits provide a variety of 

services to plan participants that may not be covered by regular health 

insurance plans. These services include eye examinations, eyeglasses, 

and contact lenses. Since the late 1980s, the provision of vision care 

benefits has been declining gradually. According to the Bureau of Labor 

Statistics, 25 percent of employees at medium and large companies 

participated in vision benefits in 1999, compared with 35 percent in 

1988.



Paid Time Off:



Employers offer paid time off benefits consisting of vacation days, 

sick leave, personal leave, funeral leave, and leave to meet court and 

military obligations as part of a standard benefits package. While most 

companies continue to maintain separate leave categories, an increasing 

number are combining sick days and vacation days into a single plan 

called a paid time off bank. A human resources consulting firm found 

that 18 percent of companies responding to a survey had paid time off 

banks in 2000, compared with 6 percent in 1997.



Among employers who maintain separate leave plans, the amount of paid 

time off has remained relatively stable since the 1980s. Employers 

offer an average of 9 paid holidays annually. The number of paid 

vacation days varies with employee tenure, ranging from about 10 days 

for employees with 1 year of service up to 22 days for employees with 

30 years of service. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, in 

1997, 23 percent of all employees may carry over a specified amount of 

unused vacation leave annually; 49 percent must use their leave within 

the year earned; 13 percent may cash in unused vacation time; and 

10 percent may carry over and cash in unused leave.[Footnote 53]



Sick leave policies vary greatly. Some employers provide a fixed number 

of sick days annually, while others do not limit the number of allowed 

days. Some of the nine companies we contacted provided a fixed number 

of sick days annually, ranging from 5 to 12 days, and others 

incorporated sick days into paid time off banks. According to the 

Bureau of Labor Statistics, 53 percent of all employees were covered by 

sick leave plans in 1999.



Few employers offer paid family leave to new biological or adoptive 

parents. Rather, most permit employees to take 12 weeks of unpaid 

maternity or paternity leave and adoptive and foster care leave in 

accordance with the Family and Medical Leave Act of 1993.[Footnote 54] 

According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, unpaid family leave 

covered 93 percent of full-time employees at medium and large companies 

in 1997, compared with 84 percent in 1995. Paid maternity and paternity 

leave in the private sector appears to be rare. In 1997, only 2 percent 

of companies offered paid leave, according to the Bureau of Labor 

Statistics. Of the nine companies we contacted, one allowed employees 

to take up to 3 years unpaid leave after the birth of a child and to 

return to a comparable position. Another company gave mothers 12 weeks 

paid leave with the option to take additional unpaid time off. If she 

returns within 6 months, the company guarantees her position; if she 

returns after 1 year, the company guarantees employment, but not the 

same position.



Personal Financial Employee Education:



Personal financial employee education initially was a benefit reserved 

for executive-level employees, but at some companies it has gradually 

been made available to all employees. Employers offer personal 

financial employee education as a way to increase participation in 

401(k) plans, increase employee contribution levels, comply with 

Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974[Footnote 55] 

regulations, and decrease potential liability for losses. According to 

a March 2001 human resources consulting firm report, 76 percent of 

surveyed employees received some type of financial planning services at 

work. The top financial planning services offered included retirement 

planning, insurance advice, and investment and tax planning.



Relocation Assistance:



Some employers reimburse employee expenses associated with relocation 

and increasingly are offering relocation assistance to entry-level 

employees. As a result, employers are developing tiered relocation 

programs for new and current hires that offer a specific range of 

benefits based on salary, grade level, or category, such as renter 

versus homeowner and long-versus short-term assignments. Most of the 

companies we contacted offered some form of relocation assistance to 

employees. Three of these companies limited assistance by job or 

operational and specific career development requirements for the 

company. For example, one of these has a robust relocation assistance 

program for employees who relocate frequently. One company covers all 

relocation expenses under a standard and graduated package. Other 

companies provide relocation assistance in limited circumstances based 

on an employee’s job level. For instance, front-line employees may 

receive a flat lump sum reimbursement, while more senior managers 

receive additional money or services.



Standard features of relocation assistance packages include shipment or 

storage of household goods, temporary living expenses, and house-

hunting trips. Some employers are providing predecision orientation 

trips in addition to house-hunting trips, and also may offer housing 

differential assistance programs to renters and homeowners to assist 

with extreme discrepancies in housing costs in certain high-cost areas. 

A 2001 survey by a relocation consulting firm found that 94 percent of 

companies with relocation programs reimbursed closing costs on new home 

purchases. Some employers also offer mortgage assistance through 

national lenders that provide competitive interest rates. According to 

the survey, 53 percent of polled companies identified spouse employment 

issues as a reason employees were reluctant to relocate. As a result, 

some corporations include spousal assistance in their relocation 

program.



Retiree Health Benefits:



Since World War II, many employers who voluntarily sponsor health 

insurance as an employee benefit have offered health benefits to their 

retirees as well. We reported in May 2001 that employer-sponsored 

retiree health benefits have been declining gradually since at least 

1997.[Footnote 56] According to a human resources consulting firm, 

fewer than one-third of large employers offered health benefits to most 

retirees in 2000--a drop of 8 percentage points since 1997. Many 

employers that continue to offer coverage have reduced the terms of 

coverage by tightening eligibility requirements, increasing the share 

of premiums retirees pay for health benefits, or increasing copayments 

and deductibles, thereby contributing to a gradual erosion of benefits.



Retirement Plans:



Employers typically offer a defined benefit plan, a defined 

contribution plan, or a combination of these plans. Defined benefit 

plans provide a fixed pension benefit at retirement. In contrast, 

defined contribution plans specify employer and employee contributions 

but do not guarantee future benefits. Although the basic provisions of 

employer-sponsored defined benefit plans have been relatively stable 

for the past two decades, defined contribution plans have supplemented 

or supplanted defined benefit plans. According to the Bureau of Labor 

Statistics, 50 percent of full-time employees were enrolled in defined 

benefit plans in 1997, compared with 59 percent in 1991, and 57 percent 

were enrolled in defined contribution plans in 1997, compared with 

48 percent in 1991. All nine of the companies that we contacted offered 

some form of retirement plan. All the companies offered a 401(k) plan, 

and three offered a company stock purchase plan.



Recent trends in 401(k) plans include higher matching contributions, 

faster vesting and eligibility, and more investment options. 

Eligibility ranges from immediate to 1 year and is growing shorter as 

the workforce becomes more mobile. According to the Profit Sharing/

401(k) Council of America, 37 percent of employees in surveyed 

companies were immediately eligible to participate in 401(k) plans in 

2000, and they could select from an average of 12 investment funds. 

Many companies offer to match employee contributions. However, employer 

matches vary considerably, ranging from 25 percent to 100 percent of 

employee pay contributions in 2000. According to the Profit Sharing/

401(k) Council of America, the most popular type of fixed match is 

$0.50 per $1.00 up to the first 6 percent of pay contributed. Some 

employers weight the match more heavily toward the first 2 percent or 

3 percent of pay contributed by employees. A survey conducted by a 

human resources consulting firm found that almost one-third of polled 

companies offer immediate vesting of employer matching contributions. 

Others offer vesting for matching contributions over a period of 3 to 

5 years. At the nine companies we contacted, allowable contributions to 

401(k) plans ranged from 1 percent to 50 percent of pretax base pay. 

Nearly all of these companies provided matching contributions ranging 

from $0.50 to $1.00 for every dollar contributed by employees. In most 

cases, the plans offered immediate vesting.



Employers are beginning to offer a “hybrid” plan that combines elements 

of defined benefit and defined contribution plans. We reported in 2000 

that about 19 percent of 1999 Fortune 1000 firms had begun sponsoring 

cash balance plans, an emerging type of defined benefit plan that 

resembles a defined contribution plan.[Footnote 57] Cash balance plans 

allow workers to accrue higher pension benefits earlier in their 

careers than they would under most traditional defined benefit plans. 

Cash balance plans also allow more mobile workers to secure and retain 

higher benefits, even when they change jobs, than they would under most 

defined benefit plans.



Short-and Long-Term Disability:



Short-term disability benefits protect employees against lost income 

resulting from nonwork-related illnesses or accidents. These benefits 

include paid sick leave plans that replace earnings for a fixed number 

of days per year, as well as sickness and accident plans that replace a 

portion of earnings for a fixed period of time, generally 6 to 

12 months. The majority of participants have their benefits paid by 

their employer through funded plans, usually self-insured or insured by 

carriers. The two most common ways to provide benefit payments are 

either as a percentage of employee earnings or as a flat dollar amount. 

According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, 49 percent of employees at 

medium and large companies participated in short-term disability plans 

in 1999, compared with 55 percent in 1997. According to one consulting 

firm, short-term disability plans pay covered employees their full 

salaries for the first month of disability and then a short-term 

disability benefit ranging from 60 to 70 percent of their salaries for 

up to 3 months of disability.



Long-term disability benefits, which begin after short-term disability 

benefits expire, provide a percentage of pay for disabilities that 

prevent an employee from performing any occupation that the person is 

reasonably suited to do by training, education, or experience. 

According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, 36 percent of employees at 

medium and large firms participated in long-term disability plans in 

1999, compared with 43 percent in 1997. Over the past few years there 

has been little change in cost-sharing for long-term disability 

insurance or the level of coverage. Most benefit plans continue to 

provide 60 percent of pay. According to a study by a human resources 

consulting firm, in 2000, the average monthly premium was $0.47 per 

$100 coverage.



Survivor Income Insurance:



Survivor income insurance plans provide monthly benefits to a deceased 

employee’s survivors. While life insurance usually provides a lump-sum 

benefit, a survivor income plan generally pays a monthly benefit. 

Benefits may be a fixed monthly amount or a percentage of the deceased 

employee’s salary. Benefits are usually paid for a limited period, such 

as 24 months. Some plans continue payment until a surviving spouse 

marries or reaches age 65 or until dependent children reach a certain 

age. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, 5 percent of 

employees participated in survivor income insurance plans in 1999; this 

percentage remained unchanged from 1994.



Tuition Assistance:



Tuition assistance benefits reimburse employees for job-related 

courses, courses related to future jobs within the company, degree-

related courses, and--less commonly--for nonjob-related courses. 

Employers may reimburse eligible employees for both degree programs and 

on a course-by-course basis. Many employers limit eligibility to full-

time salaried employees and require employees to fulfill a minimum 

service period of 6 months to 1 year prior to becoming eligible for 

this benefit. Although most employers who offer this benefit pay a 

portion of educational expenses, such as tuition and book costs, most 

impose limits on reimbursement amounts through maximum reimbursement 

levels or limits on the number of courses per term or per year. 

Reimbursement varies by company and may be based on obtaining certain 

grades, completion of courses, and the employee’s agreement to remain 

with the company for a specified period of time. Eight of the nine 

companies we contacted offered some form of tuition assistance. They 

limited assistance to tuition costs and books with total reimbursement 

ranging from $1,000 to $5,250, or three courses per semester. One 

company required employees to maintain a grade of “C” or better. Three 

of the nine companies required employees to remain with the company for 

a certain time period, generally up to 3 years. According to the Bureau 

of Labor Statistics, 55 percent of employees had access to this benefit 

for work-related courses and 17 percent were eligible for nonwork-

related educational assistance in 1999, compared with 65 percent and 

18 percent, respectively, in 1995. However, few employers provide 

educational assistance for employees’ dependents. Only one of the nine 

companies we contacted offered merit-based scholarships for employees’ 

dependents, but even these were extremely limited in number.



[End of section]



Appendix V: Comments from the Department of Defense:



ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF DEFENSE 4000 DEFENSE PENTAGON WASHINGTON, DC 

20301-4000:



AUG 22 2002:



FORCE MANAGEMENT POLICY:



Mr. Derek B. Stewart:



Director, Military and Civilian Personnel Issues U.S. General 

Accounting Office:



Washington, DC 20548:



Dear Mr. Stewart:



This is the Department of Defense (DoD) response to the GAO draft 

report GAO-02-935, “Military Personnel: Active Duty Benefits Reflect 

Changing Demographics, but Opportunities Exist to Improve,” dated July 

29, 2002 (GAO Code 350202).



The GAO was asked to review the active duty benefit structure. 

Specifically, the objectives were to determine: 1) how DoD has changed 

benefits in response to demographic changes in the active duty military 

since the advent of the all-volunteer force in 1973 and, 2) how the 

military’s overall benefit package compares with the array of benefits 

offered by private sector firms. I am encouraged by your findings 

noting that DoD’s benefits have kept pace with demographic changes in 

the active duty force and there are no significant gaps in the benefits 

offered by the military in comparison to those available in the private 

sector.	At the attachment, I’ve addressed the two recommendations you 

identified as areas with opportunities in which we can improve. Also, 

under separate cover, my staff is routing several technical corrections 

for your consideration.



On behalf of the DoD, I want to take this opportunity to commend GAO 

for its efforts in conducting this comprehensive study of military 

benefits. Certainly, the men and women of the Armed Forces who serve 

this Nation deserve the best support that we can provide them. And, in 

that regard, I appreciate the work GAO has done to ensure that they 

receive no less.



Sincerely,



Charles S. Abell:

Signed by Charles S. Abell:



Attachment: As stated:



GAO-02-935/GAO CODE 350202:



“MILITARY PERSONNEL: ACTIVE DUTY BENEFITS REFLECT CHANGING 

DEMOGRAPHICS, BUT OPPORTUNITIES EXIST TO IMPROVE”:



DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE COMMENTS TO THE RECOMMENDATIONS:



RECOMMENDATION 1: The GAO recommended that the Secretary of Defense 

direct the Under Secretary for Personnel and Readiness to develop 

measures for tracking and assessing the effectiveness of installation-

level services offered through DoD’s spousal employment assistance 

program. (Page 25/Draft Report):



DoD RESPONSE: Concur. The DoD Spouse Employment Working Group is 

aggressively pursuing a variety of initiatives to improve spousal 

employment opportunities, such as providing job search training and 

resolving issues with differing state residency licensing requirements 

for teaching, nursing, etc. The capacity to gather pertinent 

information on spousal employment exists within the network of 

installation-level Family Support Centers. The office of the Deputy 

Assistant Secretary for Military Community and Family Policy will track 

and assess this data on a recurring basis.



RECOMMENDATION 2: The GAO recommended that the Secretary of Defense 

direct the Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness to 

assess the feasibility, costs, and benefits of offering extended time 

off to parents of newborn or adopted children as one way to increase 

retention of trained, experienced personnel. (Page 25/Draft Report):



DoD RESPONSE: Partially Concur. The Department has contracted a study 

to evaluate the feasibility of implementing an extended leave program 

that will be offered to active duty military members. This is a 

comprehensive review of programs being currently offered in civilian 

organizations and other government agencies to include the U.S. Coast 

Guard. An assessment of extended leave for new parents, as well as 

other reasons for leaves of absence, will be examined. This study is 

scheduled for completion by September 30, 2002.



[End of Section]



Appendix VI: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments:



GAO Contact:



Brenda S. Farrell (202) 512-3604:



Acknowledgments:



Thomas W. Gosling, Stacey E. Keisling, Krislin M. Nalwalk, Stefano 

Petrucci, and Lois L. Shoemaker also made significant contributions to 

the report.



FOOTNOTES



[1] The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics defines a benefit as “non-wage 

compensation provided to employees.” We use the term to include such 

benefits as retirement, health care, and educational assistance, as 

well as certain programs and services that support military members and 

their families, including child care, spousal employment assistance, 

and relocation assistance.



[2] For purposes of this review, we obtained data on medium and large 

employers. The Bureau of Labor Statistics defines “medium and large 

employers” as those having 100 or more employees.



[3] See U.S. General Accounting Office, Military Personnel: Active Duty 

Benefits Reflect Changing Demographics, but Continued Focus Is Needed, 

GAO-02-557T (Washington, D.C.: Apr. 11, 2002).



[4] Pub. L. 106-65, sec. 641, Oct. 5, 1999; Pub. L. 106-398, sec. 752, 

Oct. 30, 2000.



[5] Our estimate may understate the total amount appropriated for 

military compensation because funds for certain benefits are aggregated 

into higher-level budget categories and therefore are not visible in 

the budget.



[6] Pub. L. 99-145, Title VIII, secs. 801 et. seq. at 806, Nov. 8, 

1985.



[7] Pub. L. 101-189, sec. 661, Nov. 29, 1989.



[8] DOD Instruction 1342.22, Dec. 30, 1992.



[9] Pub. L. 106-398, secs. 752 and 722, Oct. 30, 2000.



[10] Pub. L. 107-107, sec. 654, Dec. 28, 2001.



[11] In 2000, DOD calculated that it needed 215,000 child care spaces 

to meet the demand. At that time, DOD offered approximately 170,000 

child care spaces--a shortfall of about 45,000 spaces.



[12] Congress has urged DOD to provide further employment assistance 

for military spouses. The National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 

Year 2002 directed the Secretary of Defense to examine existing DOD and 

other federal government, state, and nongovernmental programs with the 

objective of improving retention by increasing the employability of 

military spouses and assisting these spouses in gaining access to 

financial, educational, and employment opportunities through these 

programs. Pub. L. 107-107, sec. 571, Dec. 28, 2001.



[13] See U.S. General Accounting Office, Military Attrition: Better 

Data, Coupled With Policy Changes, Could Help the Services Reduce Early 

Separations, GAO/NSIAD-98-213 (Washington, D.C.: Sept. 15, 1998).



[14] This figure includes enlistee’s pay and allowances as well as the 

cost of the services’ recruiting and training infrastructure. See GAO/

NSIAD-98-213.



[15] The major national defense missions assigned to the Coast Guard 

include maritime interception, deployed port operations/security and 

defense, peacetime engagement, and environmental defense operations.



[16] Participation is limited to commissioned officers at the O-3 rank 

or above who have served on active duty in the Coast Guard for at least 

5 years; warrant officers who have completed a 3-year probationary 

period; and temporary regular officers with at least 3 years of active 

duty service. Enlisted members at the E-4 rank or above with more than 

4 years of Coast Guard active duty service may also participate. Both 

officer and enlisted members must demonstrate satisfactory performance. 

Approval is based on the needs of the service and may be denied to 

personnel who serve in specialties or ratings that have a critical 

shortage. Members may use the separation program only once in their 

career.



[17] Pub. L. 103-3, Feb. 5, 1993.



[18] See U.S. General Accounting Office, Retiree Health Insurance: Gaps 

in Coverage and Availability, GAO-02-178T (Washington, D.C.: Nov. 1, 

2001).



[19] DOD requires active duty service members to enroll in TRICARE 

Prime, a managed care program. Their dependents may choose health care 

coverage from among three options--(1) TRICARE Prime; (2) TRICARE 

Extra, a preferred provider option; or (3) TRICARE Standard, a fee-for-

service option.



[20] Pub. L. 107-14, sec. 4, June 5, 2001.



[21] Pub. L. 106-65, sec. 601, Oct. 5, 1999; Pub. L. 106-398, sec. 601, 

Oct. 30, 2000.



[22] Pub. L. 107-107 in sec. 601 sets forth pay tables that reflect the 

pay increases effective Jan. 1, 2002.



[23] Pub. L. 106-65, sec. 641, Oct. 5, 1999.



[24] Pub. L. 106-398, sec. 605, Oct. 30, 2000.



[25] See U.S. General Accounting Office, Human Capital: Key Principles 

From Nine Private Sector Organizations, GAO/GGD-00-28 

(Washington, D.C.: Jan. 31, 2000).



[26] Pub. L. 107-107, sec. 638, Dec. 28, 2001.



[27] 10 U.S.C. secs. 1079(g) and 1086(c)(2)(B).



[28] See Veterans’ Educational Assistance Act of 1984, Pub. L. 98-525, 

Oct. 19, 1984.



[29] 26 U.S.C. sec. 692.



[30] 38 U.S.C. sec. 5301.



[31] 10 U.S.C. sec. 1201.



[32] 10 U.S.C. sec. 1212. See also Military Compensation Background 

Papers, Fifth Edition, Sept. 1996, DOD Office of the Secretary of 

Defense, Chapter III.C.2.



[33] Pub. L. 107-107, sec. 622, Dec. 28, 2002.



[34] Veterans’ Educational Assistance Act of 1984, Pub. L. 98-525, Oct. 

19, 1984.



[35] 38 U.S.C. sec. 3002.



[36] 38 U.S.C. sec. 3011.



[37] 38 U.S.C. sec. 3031.



[38] 38 U.S.C. sec. 3015.



[39] Pub. L.107-107, sec. 654, Dec. 28, 2001.



[40] 10 U.S.C. sec. 2007.



[41] Pub. L. 99-145, sec. 806, Nov. 8, 1985.



[42] Pub. L. 107-107, Title VII, Dec. 28, 2001.



[43] Pub. L. 107-14, sec. 4, June 5, 2001.



[44] Pub. L. 107-107, sec. 642, Dec. 28, 2001.



[45] 50 U.S.C. App. 530.



[46] 10 U.S.C. secs. 1402 and 1406.



[47] Pub. L. 99-348, July 1, 1986; 10 U.S.C. sec. 1410.



[48] The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics defines medium and large 

private companies as those with 100 or more employees.



[49] Deloitte & Touche, Deloitte & Touche and Pension & Investments 

2001 Annual 401(k) Benchmarking Survey (New York: Deloitte & Touche, 

2001); Employee Benefit Research Institute, EBRI Databook on Employee 

Benefits (Washington, D.C.: EBRI, 1997); Hay Group, The Hay Report: 

Compensation and Benefits Strategies for 2001 and Beyond (Philadelphia, 

Pa.: Hay Group, Inc., 2001); Hewitt Associates, Survey Findings: Design 

and Administration of Educational Reimbursement Plans (Lincolnshire, 

Ill.: Hewitt Associates LLC, 1999); Hewitt Associates, Survey 

Highlights: Managing Time Off 2000/2001 (Lincolnshire, Ill.: Hewitt 

Associates LLC, 2001); William M. Mercer and Bright Horizons Family 

Solutions, Work/Life Initiatives 2000 Survey Report (New York: William 

M. Mercer, Incorporated, 2001); and William M. Mercer, Spotlight on 

Benefits: A 2001 Study of Benefit Plans (Louisville, Ky.: William M. 

Mercer, Incorporated, 2001).



[50] Other convenience benefits include entertainment and tickets, on-

site banking and postal services, company stores, travel planning, 

photo developing, free or subsidized meals at work, preferred parking 

for pregnant employees, florists, shoe repair, prescription drug 

deliveries, barbers, personal shopping, pet care, car inspections, 

casual dress days, and personal use of company computers and the 

Internet.



[51] Pub. L. 103-3, Feb. 5, 1993.



[52]  GAO-01-563T.



[53] Data was not available from 5 percent of medium and large 

companies in 1997 concerning their paid leave policies.



[54] Pub. L. 103-3, Feb. 5, 1993.



[55] Pub. L. 93-406, Sept. 2, 1974.



[56] U.S. General Accounting Office, Retiree Health Benefits: Employer-

Sponsored Benefits May be Vulnerable to Further Erosion, GAO-01-374 

(Washington, D.C.: May 1, 2001).



[57] U.S. General Accounting Office, Cash Balance Plans: Implications 

for Retirement Income, GAO/HEHS-00-207 (Washington, D.C.: Sept. 29, 

2000).



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