Life Cycle Cost of Military Manpower Model (1.0.0)
In an overview of its Fiscal Year 2014 budget request, the U. S. Department of Defense (DoD) reports that “The cost of military pay and allowances, combined with military health care, comprises about one-third of the Department’s budget. These costs have been growing rapidly in recent years — up almost 90 percent since FY 2001 (about 30 percent more than growth in inflation), while active duty end strength has grown by less than 3 percent” (Office of the Under Secretary of Defense 2013, pg. 1-2, http://www.webcitation.org/6OdX1HrAM). Interestingly, DoD currently has no analytical framework that supports estimation the life cycle costs of each individual service member (Reserve Forces Policy Board 2013, http://www.webcitation.org/6OdXUmGcq), yet this type of analysis is critical to senior decision making on issues such as the future composition of the military force (e.g., the number of active-duty personnel versus reservists and guardsmen). This case study shows how the new Repast Simphony statecharts capability can be used to create a military manpower life cycle cost analysis model, focusing particularly on United States Air Force (USAF) service members.
Release Notes
Initial OpenABM submission.
Associated Publications
Ozik, J., N. Collier, T. Combs, C.M. Macal, and M.J. North. 2015. “Repast Simphony Statecharts.” Journal of Artificial Societies and Social Simulation (in press).
Life Cycle Cost of Military Manpower Model 1.0.0
Submitted byJonathan OzikPublished Jan 05, 2015
Last modified Feb 23, 2018
In an overview of its Fiscal Year 2014 budget request, the U. S. Department of Defense (DoD) reports that “The cost of military pay and allowances, combined with military health care, comprises about one-third of the Department’s budget. These costs have been growing rapidly in recent years — up almost 90 percent since FY 2001 (about 30 percent more than growth in inflation), while active duty end strength has grown by less than 3 percent” (Office of the Under Secretary of Defense 2013, pg. 1-2, http://www.webcitation.org/6OdX1HrAM). Interestingly, DoD currently has no analytical framework that supports estimation the life cycle costs of each individual service member (Reserve Forces Policy Board 2013, http://www.webcitation.org/6OdXUmGcq), yet this type of analysis is critical to senior decision making on issues such as the future composition of the military force (e.g., the number of active-duty personnel versus reservists and guardsmen). This case study shows how the new Repast Simphony statecharts capability can be used to create a military manpower life cycle cost analysis model, focusing particularly on United States Air Force (USAF) service members.
Release Notes
Initial OpenABM submission.
Cite this Model
Todd Combs, Jonathan Ozik (2015, January 05). “Life Cycle Cost of Military Manpower Model” (Version 1.0.0). CoMSES Computational Model Library. Retrieved from: https://www.comses.net/codebases/4464/releases/1.0.0/
Associated Publication(s)
Ozik, J., N. Collier, T. Combs, C.M. Macal, and M.J. North. 2015. “Repast Simphony Statecharts.” Journal of Artificial Societies and Social Simulation (in press).
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