Trump’s Transgender Ban Would Cost $960 Million, Say Navy Professors in New Report
Price is More Than 100 Times the Cost of Trans Health Care
SAN FRANCISCO, CA — A new report co-authored by current and retired professors at the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey has projected the cost of discharging the military’s transgender troops at $960 million. The report was released in response to the recent announcement by President Trump, on Twitter, that the military would no longer “allow Transgender individuals to serve in any capacity in the U.S. Military,” citing what the president called the “tremendous medical costs” of providing adequate care.
But the new report shows that discharging and replacing the estimated 12,800 transgender service members who are already serving would cost over 100 times more than providing medically necessary health care to the military’s transgender troops. “Fully implementing President Trump’s ban would cost $960 million in pursuit of savings of $8.4 million per year,” the report concludes. The $8.4 million figure is the upper-bound estimate calculated by the RAND Corporation for providing health care to transgender troops each year.
“If President Trump is truly concerned about the financial costs of transgender service,” said Aaron Belkin, director of the Palm Center and a co-author of the new report, “his announced ban has it exactly backwards. American taxpayers should ask the president, who is proud of his business savvy, why he’s spending a dollar to buy a dime.”
The new report uses a “replacement-cost method” to calculate the overall cost of ousting transgender troops. Since the military has to recruit and train a replacement for each service member discharged, the authors explain, the total price of a ban was derived by multiplying the number of service members who will be discharged by the cost of recruiting and training a replacement.
Click here to read the new report
The authors used conservative figures to derive their cost projection. While some media reports have cited an estimate that 15,500 transgender troops are currently serving, the authors used a lower figure published in the New England Journal of Medicine estimating that there are 12,800 transgender service members. (RAND’s estimate included a range that dipped even lower; the current report uses the middle figure). Since RAND’s $8.4 million figure for health care spending was an upper-bound estimate, the actual cost of purging the military of its transgender troops may be far more than 100 times higher. And the current report did not include administrative costs and lost time for personnel tasked with rounding up transgender personnel and overseeing their separation, or of legal costs that are sure to mount as service members challenge the Pentagon’s effort to purge their ranks in the military.