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The Effects of World War II Military Service: Evidence from Australia

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posted on 2024-11-16, 02:34 authored by Alex Cousley, Peter Siminski, Simon VilleSimon Ville
Outside of the United States, few studies have estimated the effects of World War II service. In Australia, general war-time conscription and minimal involvement in the Korean War led to large cohort differences in military service rates, which we use for identification. We find a small, temporary negative effect on employment and a substantial positive effect on post-school qualifications, but not at the university level. While service increased home ownership slightly, it greatly reduced outright home ownership, consistent with the incentives provided by veterans' housing benefits. We also find a positive effect on marriage, but only from 1971.

Funding

Army service, employment incentives and veterans' life outcomes: a natural experiment

Australian Research Council

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History

Citation

Cousley, A., Siminski, P. & Ville, S. (2017). The Effects of World War II Military Service: Evidence from Australia. The Journal of Economic History, 77 (3), 838-865.

Journal title

Journal of Economic History

Volume

77

Issue

3

Pagination

838-865

Language

English

RIS ID

115650

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