« Reply #3 on: June 28, 2023, 06:07:04 am »
Yes and no. Up or out does have the effect of making more slots for promotion available. Fewer available promotion slots would mean younger Marines will have to wait longer to be promoted, and that may hurt retention of some of your best people.
Cuts both ways.
Yeah, I get what you're saying. Ultimately, the U.S. military still uses the same personnel management system leftover from World War II. It might have worked back then but it's broken now, and Congress has done nothing to fix it. I know several extremely competent (and embittered) veterans who got screwed by that system in general, and the Office of Personnel Management in particular, which cared only for available billets and not the capable service people who filled them, or could fill them. There should have been some system in place decades ago to retain those who demonstrated excellence in their MOS and wanted to stay in service, instead of ruthlessly kicking them to the curb due to sheer numbers and "up or out." There has to be a better way of managing the military "workforce."

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