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Chapter 2:

 

Characteristics of Active Component Accessions

During FY 2002, 181,510 Active Component non-prior service recruits (individuals who had not previously served in the military) and 12,890 prior service recruits (individuals with military experience) shipped to recruit training centers (Table 2.3). This does not include individuals who entered the DEP in FY 2002 but had not been sent to basic training by September 30, 2002, nor does it include Reserve Component recruits (see Chapter 5 for Reserve Component enlisted accession data).

In the Active Components, approximately 93 percent of accessions have never served in the military before. The nearly 13,000 prior service accessions representing approximately 6 percent of Active Component enlistees in FY 2002 is larger than last year’s cohort of less than 12,000 and the FY 2000 cohort of less than 10,000. Prior service accessions are older and more likely to be married than their NPS counterparts. Prior service recruits more closely resemble the Active Component enlisted force—in terms of age and marital status—from which most of them came. In terms of other characteristics, they are similar to their non-prior service counterparts. Additional statistics on prior service accession characteristics (e.g., race/ethnicity, education levels, and AFQT scores) are contained in Appendix B, Tables B-13 through B-22. The remainder of this section examines a number of sociodemographic characteristics of FY 2002 NPS recruits, and compares them with the 18- to 24-year-old civilian non-institutionalized U.S. population.

Table 2.3. FY 2002 Active Component Non-Prior Service (NPS) and
Prior Service Enlisted Accessions
Service
Enlisted Accessions
Prior
Service
Non-Prior Service
Total
Non-Prior Service Percent of Service Total
Army
7,885
69,591
77,476
89.9
Navy
2,167
43,500
45,667
95.3
Marine Corps
665
31,972
32,637
98.0
Air Force
2,173
36,447
38,620
94.4
DoD Total
12,890
181,510
194,400
93.4

Also see Appendix Tables B-13 through B-22 (Prior Service Accessions).

The proportion of accessions to applicants over FYs 1976–2002 is tracked in Figure 2.1. This ratio provides an index of the recruiting market. In the earlier years, recruiters sent far more applicants to MEPSs for processing to achieve recruiting objectives. In FY 1981, more than 800,000 applicants were processed through MEPSs to access approximately 301,000 new recruits a 38 percent accession-to-applicant ratio. In the early 1980s, the Services implemented a series of management initiatives designed to emphasize quality and reduce overhead costs. Recruiting management objectives and award systems were changed to emphasize types of applicants (e.g., high school diploma graduates, Category IIIA and higher) in contrast to achieving purely numerical goals; enlistment screening tests were devised to estimate ASVAB performance prior to sending an individual to a test site.

Figure 2.1. Number of accessions and applicants with ratio of accessions to applicants, FYs 1976–2002.

Over the last decade, recruiters have expended great effort in screening prospects. For most years, progressively fewer prospects were sent to MEPSs. In FY 2002, approximately 381,000 applicants were processed through MEPSs to access nearly 182,000 new recruits, less than a 48 percent ratio of accessions to applicants, dropping slightly from the nearly 50 percent ratio in FY 2001.

 

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