Under the Keating government, defence went into caretaker mode.
it got so bad that we didn't even have blanks at times, and machine gunners were known to yell "Buckets of bullets, buckets of bullets!" to simulate suppressing fire.
C Coy 3 RAR, became "HAGAR Platoon" and A and B companies were both under strength.
There was no recruitment for some time, which lead to even more discharges and worse under manning.
It was soul destroying and criminal IMO.
Then, all of a sudden, we needed to be bought back up to strength, and we had to run I.E.T training within the Battalion, which turned out to be a really good thing, as we could train paratroopers how we wanted them, set a high standard .
Very soon we had a full Bn again, and well motivated and trained.
Then....the money stopped again, but not as dramatically.
The point is, when you lose so many staff so quickly, it rubs off on those who remain, and causes a sort of work place depression.
This depression leads to poor performance and lack of motivation, and further discharges. Those that do not snap out of the depression, resent the new motivated guys, and then end up discharging themselves, losing a once very good soldier. And the retention issue begins.
I imagine it would be similar in the Navy, the job I am in now is going through a similar phase right now.
There is NO quick fix. We have had so many new staff that I don't know many of the new names. An experienced officer is now 18 months in the job compared to 8 -10 years. A new culture has crept in, and its ugly. Inexperienced staff, mentoring and training more inexperienced staff.....what could possibly go wrong!
Us old hands can only do so much.
I come to work to do my job, not my job and train the new guy as well....permanently. I still have 10 years of this, it has been the way it is now for at least the last 2 years, and no signs of improvement. We red line every day. An average day would see between 10 and 40 staff short, no matter how many new courses we put through, and its gone from 1 course of @ 12 per year, to now, 4 courses of 20 + a year.