BASE-Publications: Abstracts
Military service
during wartime: Its effects on men's occupational trajectories and later
economic well-being
Ineke Maas &
Richard A. Settersten, Jr. (1999)
European Sociological Review, 15,
213-232.
German men now over the age of 70
began their occupational careers during unfavourable historical circumstances.
World War II forced many men out of the labour market, and, after spending time
as soldiers or prisoners, these men faced the task of rebuilding their work
lives. How did military service affect the occupational careers of these men?
How permanent were those effects? Were certain cohorts affected mote than
others? And how did it affect their economic well-being in later life! To
answer these questions, we use extensive life-history data on 244 men from the
Berlin Aging Study. These men, between the ages of 70 and 103, are split into
three birth cohorts (1887-1900; 1901-1910; 1911-1922). Several findings support
the hypothesis that military service negatively affected men's occupational
careers, even after controlling for pre-war educational and occupational
attainment. These effects, however, diminish rapidly over time, as the German
economy began to recover. While military service was most prevalent and longest
in the youngest cohort, the short-term negative effects of military service
were larger for the two older cohorts, lending some support to the hypothesis
that the call to service represented a more serious disruption in the lives of
older men who were already firmly grounded in work and family roles