|
This article
was adapted from Military Compensation: Balancing Cash
and Noncash Benefits, published by the Congressional
Budget Office on Jan. 16, 2004. It was written by
Carla Tighe Murray, a CBO analyst in the National
Security Division.
To attract and retain the
military personnel that it needs, the Department
of Defense must offer a compensation package that
is competitive
with those in the civilian sector and that adequately
rewards service members for the rigors of military
life. The Congressional Budget Office estimates that
in 2002 (the most recent year for which comprehensive
data are available), the average active duty service
member received a compensation package worth about
$99,000.
Noncash compensation represents almost 60 percent
of the military pay package. Cash compensationbasic
pay, allowances for things like food and housing,
special pay and bonuses, and the tax advantage that
service
members receive because some allowances are not subject
to federal income taxmakes up the other 40
percent. (See Fig. 1.)
About 40 percent of noncash compensation consists
of subsidized goods and services that can be used
immediatelysuch
as medical care, groceries, housing, and child care.
The remaining 60 percent of noncash compensation
is the accrued cost of retirement pensions and other
deferred
benefits that service members receive after they
leave active dutyincluding health care for
retirees and veterans benefits. (About half
of that deferred noncash compensation goes to veterans
when they leave
the military before retirement, and about half goes
to veterans who reach retirement.) Yet only about
one-third of officers and 10 to 15 percent of enlisted
personnel
serve the 20 years needed to retire.
| Fig. 1 Cash and Noncash Compensation
per Active Duty Member |
 |
| This figure
includes compensation that service members
receive while on active duty and the estimated
accrued cost of deferred compensation. |
This issue brief provides an overview of the military
compensation package and the issues surrounding the
current mix of compensation. The militarys
traditional use of noncash benefits reflects, in
part, a belief
that such benefits are cost-effective because they
support unit cohesion and reduce the costs that service
members incur in searching for new schools, stores,
and housing as they move among installations. However,
todays military increasingly emphasizes a more
expeditionary forcedeploying service members
overseas without their families for a shorter period
of time rather than rotating members and families
to and from overseas garrisons for extended tours.
Therefore,
some analysts believe that a compensation package
more heavily weighted toward cash, which would allow
service
members to choose the goods and services that they
valued most, would enable DOD to maintain a larger
and even more capable force for the same total cost.
| Fig. 2 Health Care Benefits per
Active Duty Member |
 |
| Since accrual
funding of the new benefit for Medicare-eligible
retirees was not implemented until 2003, CBOs
estimate of that category is based on Fiscal
2003 funding, reduced for inflation. |
At present, the federal budget does not display the
total cost of military personnel or show the distribution
of that total cost among its different components.
Policy-makers may therefore find it difficult to
evaluate the size of the compensation package or
the implications
of changing the mix of cash and noncash elements.
For example, some recent policy initiativesincluding
allowing some disabled retirees to receive both full
retirement pay and tax-free disability compensationhave
shifted the overall mix of compensation further toward
noncash and deferred benefits. Other policy initiatives,
such as expanding health care coverage for reservists,
have shifted the mix for that component of the service
as well.
Trends in Noncash Compensation
In 2002, noncash benefits for military personnel
totaled $78 billion, CBO estimates, or about $56,000
per active
duty service member. Noncash benefits include primarily
health care, installation-based benefits, retirement
pay, and veterans benefits.
Health Care
Health care, the largest component of noncash compensation,
amounts to approximately $29,000 per active duty
service member, or nearly 30 percent of the average
compensation
in 2002. (See Fig. 2.) The federal government spends
(or accrues liabilities of) almost $40 billion annually
for military health care. About $9 billion per year
funds the care of active duty service members and
their families. In addition, the federal government
accrues
annual liabilities of roughly $14 billion to pay
for the medical expenses of future retirees. (Because
military
members can retire in their 40s, DOD serves two distinct
groups of retirees: those who are not eligible for
Medicaregenerally those under 65 years of ageand
those who are eligible. DODs health care for
younger retirees is funded through current appropriations,
while care for Medicare-eligible retirees is funded
on an accrual basis.)
Military members who leave active duty (and become
veterans) are also eligible for health care provided
by the Department of Veterans Affairs, worth about
$15 billion annually on an accrual basis.
Health care is also the fastest-growing element of
military compensation. Between 1988 and 2002, for
example, DODs portion of health care spending
per active duty service memberadjusted for
the overall rate of inflation in the economytripled,
while cash pay per active duty member increased by
39 percent.
Some of that growth in health care spending resulted
from legislation in 2000 that eliminated co-payments
and deductibles for the families of many active duty
personnel. Much of the growth, however, reflects
real (inflation-adjusted) increases in health care
costs
in the economy as a whole, a trend that is expected
to continue.
Installation-Based Benefits
Installation-based benefits, which cost more than
$16 billion in 2002or about $12,000 per active
duty service memberare the second largest component
of noncash pay. They include free or subsidized food,
housing, education and child care for dependents,
and other goods and services routinely found on military
installations. Although total spending on these benefits
declined from 1988 to 2002, spending per active duty
member increased by 48 percent in real terms. That
growth may reflect efforts to improve the quality
of
life of military personnel, particularly their housing
and child care.
Retirement Pay
Service members who leave with 20 or more years on
active duty receive an immediate lifetime annuity
funded by DOD on an accrual basis. The department
contributed
$12 billion to the military retirement fund in 2002or
about $8,000 per active duty service member. That
contribution has fallen from about $23 billion in
1988. Some of
that decrease is due to the downsizing of the force.
In addition, DODs board of actuaries lowered
the annual accrual charge per military member to
reflect a series of relatively low pay raises in
the 1990s
(lowering projections of future payments to the fund)
and relatively high interest earnings on the funds
balances. Accrual charges could increase in the future,
though, as a consequence of higher pay raises and
lower earnings for the fund.
Other Veterans Benefits
Noncash compensation for nonmedical veterans benefits
makes up about five percent of average compensation
when estimated on an accrual basis. This category
includes the militarys largest educational benefit,
the provisions of the Montgomery GI Bill, disability
compensation,
and home mortgage assistance, as well as other programs
administered by the Department of Veterans Affairs.
(Veterans benefits are not taxable, but the
magnitude of that tax advantage has not been estimated
for this
issue brief.)
Other Benefits From DOD
Other benefits from DOD are the departments
contributions to Social Securitys Old-Age and
Survivors Insurance and Disability Insurance programs
and to Medicares
Hospital Insurance program fund, as well as the departments
payments to the Unemployment Compensation for Ex-Servicemen
program. Those programs constitute two percent of
average compensation.
Mix of Cash and Noncash Compensation
Opinions vary about whether a military system in
which noncash benefits account for almost 60 percent
of total
compensation is cost-effective or appropriate, particularly
when compared with civilian compensation, in which
noncash benefits make up between 20 and 35 percent
of the total.
Views Supporting Noncash Benefits
Those who advocate a compensation package favoring
noncash benefits point out that it provides unique
benefits to the military by:
- Promoting military readiness;
- Ensuring a good quality of life for young service
members;
- Attracting and retaining service members at a
lower cost than cash compensation; and
- Providing a stable form of compensation.
Promotes Military
Readiness. Subsidized physical
fitness centers can contribute directly to military
readiness
by encouraging physical training. Programs that support
familiessuch as subsidized child care or family
housingpromote readiness indirectly, as deployed
service members who feel that their families are
taken care of may perform their jobs more effectively.
Moreover,
quality-of-life programs that encourage experienced
people to remain in the military or that attract
high-quality recruits could be said to enhance readiness.
Ensures Quality of Life. To offer a good quality
of life for service members, DOD establishes standards
for some of its in-kind benefits, particularly family
housing and child care. Ninety-six percent of DODs
child care centers are accredited, for example, whereas
just eight percent of private child care centers
are, according to a 2002 Rand study.
Costs Less. Noncash benefits can be cost-effective
if the employer can provide goods and services for
less than it would cost individual employees to purchase
the items themselves. Because group health insurance
policies can pool risks, for example, employer-provided
health insurance is generally cheaper than individually
purchased policies. DOD may similarly be able to
offer goods, such as housing, in isolated locations
where
markets are too thin to support private-sector suppliers.
The availability of relatively uniform goods and
services, including housing, at military bases throughout
the
world also reduces the search costs that frequent
moves impose on military families.
Provides Stable Compensation. Noncash benefits can
be more cost-effective than cash payments if service
members perceive them as more permanent than cash.
If members think cash allowances will substitute
for future pay raises, for example, they would
value an
in-kind benefit more highly.
Views Supporting Cash Benefits
Many analysts question the extent of the militarys
reliance on noncash benefits and believe that a greater
emphasis on cash would be more efficient for several
reasons:
- The value of cash is more easily recognized by
potential recruits, current military members deciding
whether
to re-enlist, and senior decision-makers.
- Cash makes individuals better off by giving them
more choices in how they spend their compensation.
- Changes in forces and doctrines have made the current
system favoring noncash compensation less effective.
Easily Recognized
Value. If potential recruits and
experienced service members do not recognize the
full value of the benefits package, enlistments and
retention
will be lower than they might be otherwise. People
deciding whether to join or continue in the military
might compare military and civilian cash pay without
taking into account the full value of the militarys
noncash and deferred benefits. For example, potential
recruits and younger service members may greatly
discount the 60 percent of noncash compensation that
is deferred
(such as payments from a retirement plan in which
members are vested only after 20 years of service).
Thus, a
system relying more on cash could provide a larger,
more stable force for the same money. (A study published
in the March 2001 American Economic Review found
that the vast majority of military members had a
strong
preference for current vs. deferred compensation.
Their perspectives indicated discount rates of at
least 18
percent; that is, they perceived $1 received next
year to be worth, at most, about 85 cents today.
Such a
discount rate would mean that new recruits value
$1 received after 20 years of service at only four
cents.)
Finally, it is difficult for policy-makers and senior
decision-makersin the role of employersto
assess the adequacy of total compensation when much
of it is provided through noncash benefits.
Greater Choice. Cash pay is more efficient than noncash
compensation in an economic sense because cash provides
employees maximum discretion in how they spend their
compensation. In general, because cash gives people
more control over their spending choices, people
value in-kind benefits less than cash. For example,
proponents
of a more cash-based system would favor a pay package
with relatively lower benefit costs or cash allowances
that service members could use to purchase child
care, physical training, groceries, and other commodities
from any provider.
Diminished Effectiveness of the Current System. Critics
of the current system argue that it is rooted in
a Cold War strategy that required service members
and
their families to rotate between the United States
and permanent bases overseas. They also note that
cash can be more easily targeted to those members
who are
most productive or who possess special skills that
DOD most wants to retain. If todays more expeditionary
force allows families to remain in the United States
and to develop roots in civilian communities, DODs
efforts to ease the impact of family moves by providing
on-base towns with subsidized housing, shopping,
schools, and child care may no longer be needed.
In addition,
installation-based benefits favor active duty service
members living on base. The two-thirds of active
duty members, plus reservists, who live off base
may prefer
benefits that are not tied to specific locations.
Shaping Future Compensation
Further increases in the share of noncash benefits
in military compensation could occur. For example,
if DODs future health care spending rises at
the same rate as that projected for per capita health
care costs in the United States as a whole, the departments
health care spending, adjusted for inflation, will
increase from its 2003 level of $27 billion to almost
$46 billion in 2020, CBO estimates.
Noncash compensation could also grow as DOD and Congress
seek to respond to the changing needs of the force.
For example, costs could grow if any of the following
policies, all of which have been considered by Congress
or proposed by advocacy groups, were implemented:
- Further expanding access to DODs health
care system for reservists and their dependents;
- Further expanding reservists access
to subsidized on-base activities; or
- Further expanding veterans benefits, including
elim- nating the provision that offsets recipients retirement
pay when they receive disability compensation.
Some types of noncash compensation can offer unique
advantages to the military. But even when cash compensation
is more efficient, changing the current mix to emphasize
cash compensation or forestalling further increases
in noncash benefits can be difficult for several
reasons.
Noncash benefits are hard to quantify because they
come in many forms and are funded from many different
budget accounts. For example, part of the subsidized
housing program is funded through cash allowances,
which are included in the military personnel appropriation,
while the construction and maintenance of on-base
housing are funded from other appropriations to DOD.
Noncash benefits often develop diverse constituencies.
In the case of commissaries, for example, the American
Logistics Associationa voluntary nonprofit
organization of manufacturers, brokers, distributors,
and other
companies that provide goods and services to the
military resale systemhas a mission to
promote, protect, and ensure the existence and continued
viability
of the military resale systems.
Finally, substituting cash for noncash benefits is
difficult because the switch could prove costly in
the near term, even though it would save money eventually.
For example, to avoid charges of inequity, switching
to a cash allowance system could require payments
to all eligible beneficiaries and not just to those
who
currently use a particular benefit.
Options to Increase the Cash Share
Analysts have frequently explored the economic and
budgetary implications of options that could increase
the militarys reliance on cash payments and
reduce its reliance on noncash benefits. Options
examined
by CBO include these:
Offer Medical Cafeteria
Plans
To give service members greater choice about the
form of their health care benefits, DOD could offer
medical cafeteria
plans. The idea is modeled on trends in the
private sector, where some employers have made their
compensation
systems more flexible by letting employees choose
among several different types of noncash benefits
and cash.
In its 2003 Budget Options volume, CBO included an
option that would establish a medical cafeteria plan
to give active duty service members the choice between
cash compensation and a generous medical insurance
plan with few co-payments and deductibles. While
all active duty members must receive care within
the militarys
health care system, members would receive a cash
allowance for family coverage that they could use
to:
- Purchase the current level of coverage for their
families (which would entail low co-payments
and deductibles);
- Purchase a lower level of coverage and keep the
extra cash; or
- Purchase other insurance (perhaps through a spouses
employer or other means).
CBO estimated that the net
savings in Fiscal 2004 would be $18 million, rising
to $185 million
in 2006
as the
program was fully implemented. By Fiscal
2020, savings could rise to $245 million annually.
Because active
duty personnel and their families would choose
the level of coverage that they wanted, recruiting
and
retention and the quality of the force could improve. Offer Cash Allowances
A related option would gradually substitute allowances
in place of in-kind benefits. In its 2003 Budget
Options, CBO examined an option in which commissaries
and exchanges
would be consolidated to eliminate duplicate functions,
and eligible families would receive tax-free grocery
allowances of about $500 per year. Under that system,
the federal government could save $550 million a
year, CBO estimated.
Incorporate Some Noncash Benefits Into the Military
Personnel Appropriation
CBO has also examined possibilities for consolidating
some personnel-related expendituressuch as those
for commissaries, some medical care, DOD schools, and
family housinginto DODs appropriation
for military personnel. Greater visibility would
allow
senior leaders in DOD and Congress to more easily
assess the total cost of military personnel.
Advantages of this option would include improved
incentives for DOD managers to use military personnel
effectively,
encouraging them to substitute less costly civilian
employees or contractors or labor-saving technology
for military personnel, where appropriate. Some of
those same advantages might be gained if the Administrations
annual budget submission to Congress were to provide
a consolidated display of all federal costs for military
personnel for the past fiscal year, estimates for
the current year, and requests for the budget year.
Copyright Air Force Association. All rightsreserved.
|