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Journal Article

Citation

Hosek JR, Totten ME. Def. Peace Econ. 2004; 15(5): 433-451.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2004, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/10242690420001683337

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Why should deployment affect re-enlistment? In our model, members enter the military with naiumlve beliefs about deployment and use actual deployment experience to update their beliefs and revise their expected utility of re-enlisting. Empirically, re-enlistment is related to the type and number of deployments, consistent with the learning model. Non-hostile deployment increases first-term re-enlistment but hostile deployment has little effect except for the Army, where the effect is positive. Both types increase second-term re-enlistment. Interestingly, first-term members with dependants tend to respond to deployment like second-term members. In addition, deployment acts directly to affect re-enlistment, not indirectly through time to promotion.

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