Spekkio
He bowls overhand.
So if the DoD cut 2 Army divisions and 5% of DoD civilians, that's a cut of ~$6B for the divisions, about $2B is personnel costs and the other $4B is O&M. Laying off 5% of DoD civilians save another $7B. That's $9B of personnel costs out of a ~$180B, or 5%.There is zero worlds where the 8% cuts don’t come from our compensation and from services that benefit our quality of life.
It’s been laid out, they are coming for base services, commissaries, schools, BAH and military healthcare among other cuts.
Assuming we want to cut each category evenly, there's still 3 percentage points, or $5B, to find in personnel costs to cut.
I think they're going to revisit dependent and retiree healthcare costs per the attached report from 2015 that led to the BRS retirement system. I don't think anything as drastic as completely nixing Tricare Select will come to pass, but there likely will be increased cost sharing for dependents and retirees when the dust settles.
Yes, that study was under a Democrat administration, throwing that in there to note that slashing mil benefits is a bipartisan initiative on the hill and only took a pause specifically under the Biden administration.
People are speculating about returning to a use / lose BAH system because the Heritage Foundation was advocating for it prior to publishing Project 2025, but I think when the analysis is done we will find that such a policy won't move the budget needle, similar to what was concluded in 2015.
Disclaimer: I'm rounding, so please don't come at me with decimal point errors.
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