£94m a year ‘wasted on recruitment of young soldiers’

Campaign groups have claimed the Ministry of Defence wastes up to £94m a year training 16 and 17-year-old Army recruits for roles which could be filled more cost-effectively by adults.

The report, by Child Soldiers International and ForcesWatch, found it costs the MoD twice as much to train a 16-year-old as an 18-year-old.

The organisations added that the UK was becoming “increasingly isolated” internationally in continuing to recruit people below the age of 18 into the armed forces.

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The report found it cost an estimated minimum of £88,985 to recruit and train each new soldier aged 16 to 17-and-a-half, compared with £42,818 for each adult recruit, including salary costs.

Initial training for minors lasted either 23 or 50 weeks, depending on the recruit’s trade, but enlisting adults could complete the phase-one course in 14 weeks.

The drop-out rate for minors was 36.6 per cent compared with 28.3 per cent for adults but under-18s who complete training are likely to serve for 10 years rather than the 7.6-year average for over-18s.

As a result, the report finds the taxpayer would have saved between £81.5m and £94m a year had only adults enlisted, based on recruiting for a nominal 10-year career and accounting for differing trainee drop-out rates.

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Tory MP and former Army officer Patrick Mercer said the report needed to be examined carefully.

He said: “I commanded 150 Junior Leaders in the 1980s, the majority of whom went on to be first class infantry soldiers.

“However, social conditions, financial conditions and recruiting have all changed over the last couple of decades and if it now seems that junior entry soldiers are less than cost-effective. The whole issue needs to be looked at.”

David Gee, of ForcesWatch, said: “Recruiting minors into the Army is a practice from a bygone era. It’s not just young recruits who pay the price for outdated MoD policies – taxpayers do too. And so does the Army, when it finds itself undermanned on the front line because so many minors have dropped out of training.”

An MoD spokesman said: “We do not recognise the figures suggested in this report, which ignores the benefits and opportunities that a military career offers young people.”

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