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Con re &on I Research S
informing I   leqi I ive de a ~ in e 191


                                                                                        Updated  November  18, 2024

Defense Primer: Active Component Enlisted Recruiting


Congress ona Ro e
The Constitution provides Congress with broad powers
over the Armed Forces, including the power To raise and
support Armies and To provide and maintain a Navy. In
the exercise of this authority, Congress has historically
shown  interest in military recruiting, which is critical to
maintaining a fully manned and capable volunteer military
workforce. Congress exercises a powerful influence on
recruiting through its establishment of personnel end-
strength levels for the Active and Reserve Components.
Higher end-strengths generally require more new recruits,
higher rates of retention among current servicemembers, or
some  combination of the two. Through its oversight
powers, Congress monitors the performance of the
executive branch in managing the size and quality of the
military workforce. Congress influences the achievement of
recruiting goals by the armed services in a number of ways:

*  authorizing military compensation packages that are
   competitive with civilian employers (e.g., basic pay,
   education and health benefits);
*  establishing criteria that affect eligibility for enlistment
   such as age, cognitive, behavioral, and citizenship
   requirements; and
*  funding recruiting programs that provide for dedicated
   recruiters, market research, advertising, and military
   entrance processing stations.

Successful recruiting often depends on identifying a
population that is both eligible and has a propensity for
enlistment. The policy levers most commonly used to
address recruiting issues include increased funding for
additional recruiters, advertising, and enlistment incentives
(e.g., bonuses, education benefits). When recruiting
shortfalls occur, or are anticipated, Congress may elect to
apply additional resources to these mechanisms. Likewise,
when  recruiting is expected to be strong, Congress may
elect to shift resources away from these areas. Congress
might also consider non-monetary initiatives that reduce
barriers to enlistment or otherwise increase the pool of
eligible individuals (e.g., waivers, process improvements).

  ecruiting
Without a robust ability to bring new personnel into the
military, the armed services would lack sufficient
manpower  to carry out mission essential tasks in the near
term. Moreover, without stable recruiting levels they would
lack a sufficient pool of entry-level personnel to develop
into the mid-level and upper-level leaders of the future. To
maintain a healthy military force structure, each armed
service sets goals for new personnel accessions each fiscal
year for both its Active and Reserve Components. Officer
and enlisted goals are set separately. For enlisted personnel,
there are both quantity and quality goals.


  Quantiy Goals
Quantity goals are typically based on each armed service's
projected need for new personnel (both officer and enlisted)
over the course of the year to meet its congressionally
authorized end-strength. Enlisted quantity goals are based
on the proportion of congressionally authorized end-
strength that a specific armed service and component
allocates to its enlisted force, less the projected number of
currently serving enlisted personnel it expects to retain
through the end of the year. As a hypothetical example,
assume  an armed service has an authorized Active
Component  end-strength of 200,000 total personnel,
comprised of 30,000 officers and 170,000 enlisted
personnel. If it projects that it will retain 140,000 of its
current enlisted personnel through the end of the fiscal year,
it might set a goal of enlisting 30,000 new individuals for
that year plus a certain number more to account for those
new  enlistees who are separated before the end of the year
(for example, for medical disability). The actual number of
new  enlistees needed may also change during the year as
new projections are made about the retention of currently
serving enlisted personnel, or if the armed service must
increase or decrease the total size of its force (for example,
if a Service Secretary were to exercise the authority of 10
U.S.C. §115(g)(1)(A) to increase congressionally
authorized active duty end-strength for that armed service
by up to 2%). Table 1 lists recruit quantity goals and results
for FY2022-FY2024.

Quality  Goals
Quality goals for non-prior service (NPS) recruits, are
established through law and policy. Two principal
Department  of Defense (DOD) quality benchmarks apply to
NPS  recruits. The first is the percentage of NPS enlistees
who  are high school diploma graduates (HSDGs). The
second is the percentage of scores above average on the
Armed  Forces Qualification Test (AFQT Categories I-
IIIA). DOD's recruit quality benchmarks stipulate that at
least 90% of NPS enlistees must be HSDGs and at least
60%  must score above average on the AFQT.
Supplementary  ways to assess the quality of enlistment
cohorts include the percentage of NPS enlistees who score
well-below average on the AFQT  (Category IV) and the
number  and types of enlistment waivers granted to enlistees
for medical reasons, misconduct, or drug use. Law (10
U.S.C. §520) stipulates that no more than 4% of an annual
enlistment cohort may be Category IV (10th-30th percentile
on the AFQT). However,  the 4% threshold may be
increased to 20% at the request of the Secretary with
congressional notification. DOD policy specifies that those
who  score in Category V (1t-9h percentile on the AFQT)
are ineligible to enlist. Table 2 and Table 3 list recruit
quality benchmarks and results for FY2022-FY2024.

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