|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
US: Returning veterans face mounting joblessness and low wages
By Alex Lantier
29 March 2008
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
On March 25, the Wall Street Journal published a brief
summary of a US Veterans Affairs Department study on discharged
veterans employment and wage prospects. The report, not
yet publicly released and largely blacked out in the broader US
media, paints a devastating picture of surging unemployment and
low wages for returning veterans.
It found that the percentage of veterans not in the labor forcedue
to unemployment, having returned to school for further training,
or having given up looking for workhad more than doubled
between 2000 and 2005, jumping from 10 to 23 percent. Veterans
aged 20-24 had an unemployment rate of 12 percent, 50 percent
larger than the overall US unemployment rate for adults aged 20-24,
which stands at 8 percent. On March 27, the military newspaper
Stars and Stripes, writing on the same report, noted that
18 percent of veterans reported being unemployed.
Many employed veterans earn salaries leaving them at constant
risk of financial hardship. Twenty-five percent reported earning
less than $21,840 a year. Half of those aged 20-24 earned less
than $25,000 a year.
The report also exposed one of most commonly promoted claims
of military recruiters: that recruits will gain valuable gain
job skills for future civilian life. The Journal wrote:
The report found that most of the returning veterans were
unable to find civilian jobs that matched their previous military
occupations. The only exceptions were the veterans working for
private security firms such as Blackwater or in the maintenance
and repair fields.
The Journal added: The Veterans Affairs Department
offers educational-assistance programs for young veterans, but
the report said the initiatives had little impact on the employment
status or salaries of the former military personnel.
Several other sources noted difficulties facing veterans in
looking for civilian jobs. Military.com, the veterans section
of the online recruitment web site Monster.com, released a survey
of veteran jobseekers and civilian employers in November 2007.
The survey found that 81 percent of discharged veterans did not
feel fully prepared for the process of entering the job
market, with 71 percent unsure of how to negotiate salary
and benefits and 76 percent reporting an inability to effectively
translate their military skills into civilian terms.
The way these facts came to public attentionthrough the
leaking of an internal report, which then went broadly ignored
in the mainstream pressspeaks volumes about the state of
American political life and class relations.
As US fatalities reached 4,000 this past week, the death toll
in the war and occupation of Iraq received a certain amount of
coverage in the print and broadcast media. The number of wounded
soldiers, however, is controversial and rarely discussed. And
the difficulties facing returning veteransthe lack of jobs,
financial insecurity, denial of health care, and homelessnessalso
receive little press coverage.
The problems of returning veterans are closely tied to the
deteriorating situation of the broader American working class.
They follow inevitably from the US militarys thrusting often
traumatized veterans into a society marked by rising unemployment,
deindustrialization, the destruction of high-paying jobs, and
increasingly difficult access to health care, education, and housing.
As Ricky Singh of Black Veterans for Social Justice told OneWorld
news service in November 2007, What typically happens to
young adults who go into the military at 17 or 18, when they return
home, the same kind of economic conditions that forced them towards
the military still exist or have gotten worse.
The career advice offered to veterans in a February 24, 2008,
posting on VeteransToday.com provides a revealing picture of the
US job market. It notes that in farming, production, and
transportationyoure looking at slow or negative growth
and poor job availability. Another major sector that VeteransToday.com
encourages veterans to considerconstructionis entering
recession due to the bursting of the mortgage and real estate
bubbles and the crisis on Wall Street.
Observing that the US economy is becoming more technology-oriented
and less dependent on agriculture and manufacturing, VeteransToday.com
recommends the following jobs as the place to start:
software engineer, veterinarian, financial analyst, dental hygienist,
nurse, college professor, doctor, and lawyer. However, the extensive
training required for these jobs makes them difficult options
for returning veterans, many of whom joined the armed forces upon
graduating from high school. The drying up of student loans, amid
the general tightening of US credit markets, aggravates the problem.
Among service jobs, VeteransToday.com noted, Retail sales,
wait staff, and cashier jobs are numerous, but each carries a
wince-inducing median salary of between $14,000 and $20,000 per
year. Customer service offers the fourth most job openings for
new workers, with a substantially better median salary of just
over $28,000.
The crisis of veterans health care has surfaced several
times to the medias attention, especially after the March
2007 revelation of gross neglect of wounded veterans at Walter
Reed Army Medical Center. In November 2007, the Boston Globe
reported that, according to estimates by Physicians for Social
Responsibility and staff physicians at the Veterans Affairs Department,
the total cost of treating veterans would top $650 billion.
Several factors account for this figure. The development of
body armor and rapid battlefield medical evacuation has greatly
increased the number of severely wounded soldiers who survive
their injuries, pushing the wounded-to-killed ratio to over 8
to 1, from 2 to 1 during World War II. The Globe noted
that the percentage of amputees was the highest since the US Civil
War. Moreover, the percentage of veterans afflicted by post-traumatic
stress disorder (shell shock) is currently expected to reach between
30 and 36 percent of a total population of 1.5 million veterans
of the current warsan astounding half a million patients.
Though many wounded and disabled veterans are being denied
treatment, the resulting flood of patients is overwhelming the
Veterans Affairs Department. According to a January 2008 study
by the Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America association, the
number of outstanding claims by veterans for treatment rose from
254,000 to 378,000 between 2003 and 2006, with the average waiting
time before a veteran receives treatment rising to 183 days.
This situation has provoked massive resentment among veterans.
It forced the February 28 resignation of Veterans Affairs Undersecretary
for Benefits Daniel Cooper, after a video surfaced in which Cooper,
a member of the Christian Embassy missionary group, stated that
Bible study was more important than his professional duties. In
the video, Cooper said: Its not really about carving
out time, it really is a matter of saying what is important. And
since thats more important than doing the jobthe jobs
going to be there, whether Im there or not.
CBS News reported on the epidemic of veteran suicides on March
20. Citing internal Veterans Affairs reports, CBS found that the
number of suicide attempts by recently treated VA patients almost
doubled, from 462 in 2000 to 790 in 2007. The total number of
VA patients who succeeded in committing suicide was 1,403 in 2001
and 1,784 in 2005.
Large numbers of veterans are homeless. The Department of Veterans
Affairs web page states, in its Overview of Homeless: About
154,000 veterans (male and female) are homeless on any given night
and perhaps twice as many experience homelessness at some point
during the course of a year. Many other veterans are considered
near homeless or at risk because of their poverty, lack of support
from family and friends, and dismal living conditions in cheap
hotels or in overcrowded or substandard housing.
The Alliance to End Homelessness, a nonprofit organization
quoted by the Boston Globe, gave higher estimates: 194,254
out of 744,313 homeless people on any given night [nationwide]
are veterans. The group had based its calculations on information
from the Department of Veterans Affairs and the US Census Bureau.
See Also:
Mounting social distress among
returning US troops
[7 February 2008]
Suicides by US soldiers
and war veterans surge
[13 December 2007]
US veteran population:
a mounting social catastrophe
[20 November 2007]
Brain injuries more
prevalent among US troops than earlier estimates
[1 October 2007]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |