Alcohol

Alcohol

Military conscription can foster unhealthy drinking habits, as soldiers use alcohol as a means to cope with stress and trauma. The culture of excessive drinking becomes ingrained and continues long after service ends.

Conscription Causes Unhealthy drinking habits

Alcohol abuse has long been entrenched in military tradition and remains especially prevalent in conscript armies, which cannot depend on the self-selection of highly disciplined candidates. Thus, the already heightened rates of alcohol abuse among regular armed forces will be even higher in the undisciplined enlisted army. An army held together not by a sense of obligation or commitment to one’s career but by compulsion will face entirely different dynamics of alcohol consumption.

South Korea: Three-Year After-Effect
A 2023 South Korea study finds former conscripts drink more than peers who avoided service, with elevated consumption still evident three years after discharge.
Finland: Weekly Severe Intoxication
Finnish findings report growth in the proportion of conscripts reaching a highly intoxicated state at least once per week, signaling normalized binge drinking.
Alcohold-Related Disturbances
A Finnish court case reported in 2025 describes a conscript returning drunk, causing a disturbance, and later threatening a peer suspected of reporting him.
Cases of Drunken Assault
Another Finnish case describes a drunken conscript assaulting a duty soldier, with the incident resulting in a fine, underscoring weak deterrence for alcohol-fueled violence.

Why does forced military service foster problematic drinking? Several dynamics are at work.

Conscripts are exposed to a camaraderie with high pressure on drinking, and a stressful environment, where alcohol is an easy way to take the edge off. Importantly, the damage caused by compulsory military service to soldiers’ physical health through alcohol is not short-lived. According to a 2023 study in South Korea former conscripts tend to drink more than those who escaped the draft. The effects of this period in their life remain pronounced even three years after service.

The significantly higher level of alcohol consumption among soldiers is largely explained by peer pressure. And once an individual starts to consume liquor in excessive quantities the addiction may lead to persistent drinking that continues long years after the end of service.

Similar results were observed among the Finnish conscripts. An increase in binge drinking was seen, particularly among the less educated. A significant growth occurred in the proportion of those who drank themselves at least once a week into a highly intoxicated condition. The research suggests that the conscript army environment spread the message of the traditional mode of reward “hard work, hard play”. There is also evidence for the cross-contamination of those damaging attitudes across social spheres. The educated urban young people from the South were afflicted by the spread of this notion from their less educated peers from the North. Conscription is a prime learning experience. 

Drinking problems surface in routine breakdowns of discipline that regularly appear in news stories. Finnish reporting on court cases shows how intoxication can quickly translate into disorder and intimidation inside the barracks ( in 2025 a conscript returning drunk caused a disturbance and later threatened a peer he suspected of reporting him).

Another case from Finland describes a drunken conscript who assaulted a duty soldier in the unit, with the incident ending in a fine rather than any meaningful deterrent. The “weekend drinking culture” can escalate into violence while still being treated as a marginal, manageable nuisance. And outside the gates, the same binge norms impose visible externalities on civilians: in Kirkenes, Norwegian residents complained about groups of young soldiers using a city park for partying and, lacking facilities, urinating in bushes near family homes, prompting officials to discuss collective restrictions like early curfews.

A 2026 Forsvarets Forum report notes that Norway’s conscript representatives argue the current on-base alcohol ban is “not sustainable,” because young conscripts will drink anyway—so the rule just pushes drinking into uncontrolled public spaces (woods, schools, kindergartens), along with incidents like public urination and noisy, unsafe returns to barracks. The same piece frames a pilot allowing limited beer on base as harm-reduction, explicitly to reduce dangerous incidents and even sexual harassment and bullying, and giving an implicit admission that conscription-era drinking culture is already producing serious, system-level problems.

Conscription will shape the drinking habits of young generations. The effects of alcohol abuse trickle down to their life expectancy, marriage, and psychological well-being. Ending conscription is the only reliable way to lessen such impact.

Explore the evidence

1
Conscription hurts: The effects of military service on physical health, drinking, and smoking
Dirk Bethmann, Jae Il Cho, Conscription hurts: The effects of military service on physical health, drinking, and smoking, SSM - Population Health, Volume 22, 2023, 101391, ISSN 2352-8273, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ssmph.2023.101391. (https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352827323000563) Abstract: Almost all South Korean men serve in the country's armed forces for two years. In this paper, we investigate whether the military service affects the health of draftees. Using an event study design, we use the conscription years to identify the effect the military service has on soldiers' physical health as well as on their smoking and drinking behavior. Our results show that the compulsory military service has a strong and long-lasting negative effect on physical health. Moreover, people who are drafted into the armed forces are more likely to consume more alcohol and cigarettes even years after they are discharged.
2
archive
Nutrition and other lifestyles of conscripts and health risk factors during service : Six-month follow-up study
Absetz P, Uutela A, Jallinoja P, Suihko J, Bingham C, Kinnunen M et al. Varusmiesten ravitsemus ja muut elintavat sekä terveyden riskitekijät palveluksen aikana : Kuuden kuukauden seurantatutkimus. Helsinki: Terveyden ja hyvinvoinnin laitos, 2010. (Raportti/Terveyden ja hyvinvoinnin laitos; 16/2010). https://www.julkari.fi/items/00d6cfe3-2285-4bb5-9453-356337553fec
3
Finland Media Reports
Humalainen varusmies otti päivystäjän kuristusotteeseen ja roikotti – oikeus piti väkivaltaa vähäisenä https://yle.fi/a/74-20071583 Kasarmilla humalassa metelöinyt varusmies uhkaili käräyttäjäksi epäilemäänsä kuolemalla – oikeus rapsautti sakkotuomion https://yle.fi/a/74-20201363
4
Norway Media Reports
Har prøvd i over 50 år – nå er Forsvaret positiv til øl for soldatene https://www.forsvaretsforum.no/forsvaret-forstegangstjeneste-podkast/har-provd-i-over-50-ar-na-er-forsvaret-positiv-til-ol-for-soldatene/475615 Soldater pisser i buskene – naboer fortviler https://www.forsvaretsforum.no/finnmark-forstegangstjeneste-gsv/soldater-pisser-i-buskene-naboer-fortviler/442072
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