I would say no based on the fact that dramatically increasing the armed forces or creating a new volunteer force would create quite a few economic issues.
For one thing, who is going to pay for all of these new mandatory soldiers/civic workers? I would think the main reason that service in the military pays somewhat well and provides you with funds for college is because...not many people are in it. If you made military duty mandatory you would be adding hundreds of thousands of people to the pay roll with no increase in budget. Cuts would have to be made somewhere.
But lets say it?s all volunteer work. Well, what are you going to have all those people do? Clean parks? Ok, but you don?t really need that large a force of people to do that, community service groups are able to do it with rather small numbers infrequently throughout the year. After you get the initial clean up done, then you will just have volunteers standing around with nothing to do. If you move them into civic work you are then creating competition with the private industry. Why hire workers for community upkeep work when you have access to these mandatory workers, who are legal and totally free.
Also I am not so sure that having mandatory service would be of any real boon to ones resume. After all, if its mandatory then everyone has to do it and that means its no longer special. Like attending middle school and high school, its just something that?s expected of you.
I know other countries have mandatory military service and such, but in most (I think) cases they are smaller than the United States (population wise). And this seems like one of those situations that scaling up creates problems exponentially. Kind of like how an ant works fine at its tiny size, but if you blew it up to the size of a horse its exoskeleton would just collapse on itself.
For one thing, who is going to pay for all of these new mandatory soldiers/civic workers? I would think the main reason that service in the military pays somewhat well and provides you with funds for college is because...not many people are in it. If you made military duty mandatory you would be adding hundreds of thousands of people to the pay roll with no increase in budget. Cuts would have to be made somewhere.
But lets say it?s all volunteer work. Well, what are you going to have all those people do? Clean parks? Ok, but you don?t really need that large a force of people to do that, community service groups are able to do it with rather small numbers infrequently throughout the year. After you get the initial clean up done, then you will just have volunteers standing around with nothing to do. If you move them into civic work you are then creating competition with the private industry. Why hire workers for community upkeep work when you have access to these mandatory workers, who are legal and totally free.
Also I am not so sure that having mandatory service would be of any real boon to ones resume. After all, if its mandatory then everyone has to do it and that means its no longer special. Like attending middle school and high school, its just something that?s expected of you.
I know other countries have mandatory military service and such, but in most (I think) cases they are smaller than the United States (population wise). And this seems like one of those situations that scaling up creates problems exponentially. Kind of like how an ant works fine at its tiny size, but if you blew it up to the size of a horse its exoskeleton would just collapse on itself.