A higher percentage of female veterans were also enrolled in college compared with female non-veterans, across all age groups.
A new report on the characteristics of female veterans released today by the U.S. Census Bureau shows that early-career aged female veterans (18 to 34 years old) were more likely to be employed, married and have a child in their home than early-career aged female non-veterans.
This report, which uses 2015 American Community Survey data, takes three different age snapshots, early-career (ages 18 to 34), mid-career (ages 35 to 44) and late-career (ages 45 to 64), as career proxies to determine if female veterans are different from non-veterans as they transition from military to civilian life throughout their working ages.
“This report shows some key differences between female veterans and non-veterans in the various stages of their lives,” said Daphne Lofquist, a demographer in the Social, Economic and Housing Statistics Division. “The differences are most prominent for those in the early-career age group. As they age, female veterans and non-veterans become more similar.”
A few notable differences for early-career veteran and non-veteran women:
These differences between veterans and non-veterans were generally higher for early-career women than for their mid- and late-career age counterparts.
Education also differed between female veterans and non-veterans. Early-career veterans were less likely than early-career non-veterans to have completed a college degree.
However, the reverse is true of mid- and late-career women, as a higher percentage of veterans had a completed a bachelor’s degree or higher than non-veterans in these age groups. A higher percentage of female veterans were also enrolled in college compared with female non-veterans, across all age groups.
Overall, employed female veterans were more likely to work full time, year-round (75.1 percent versus 64.6 percent); work in the government (34.8 percent versus 16.0 percent); and, for those employed full-time, year-round, have higher median earnings ($45,509 versus $39,927) than female non-veterans.
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