Enlarge By Gerry Broome, Associated Press The Marines have added 10,000 active-duty personnel at Camp Lejeune since 2000 for a total of 48,000, plus 5,000 civilian employees. Rapidly rising pay and benefits in the armed forces have lifted many military towns into the ranks of the nation's most affluent communities, a USA TODAY analysis finds. The hometown of the Marines' Camp Lejeune — Jacksonville, N.C. — soared to the nation's 32nd-highest income per person in 2009 among the 366 U.S. metropolitan areas, according to Bureau of Economic Analysis data. In 2000, it had ranked 287th. The Jacksonville metropolitan area, with a population of 173,064, had the top income per person of any North Carolina community in 2009. In 2000, it ranked 13th of 14 metro areas in the state. The USA TODAY analysis finds that 16 of the 20 metro areas rising the fastest in the per-capita income rankings since 2000 had military bases or one nearby. Other examples: •Manhattan, Kan., home of the Army's Fort Riley, is the state's most affluent metro area. In 2000, it was the poorest of the state's six metros. •Killeen, Texas, home of the Army's Fort Hood, is today more affluent than Austin, the state capital and university town 60 miles away. What's driving the income growth: pay and benefits in the military have grown faster than those in any other part of the economy. NATIONAL DEBT: A historical perspective Soldiers, sailors and Marines received average compensation of $122,263 per person in 2009, up from $58,545 in 2000. Military compensation — an average of $70,168 in pay and $52,095 in benefits — includes the value of housing, medical care, pensions, hazardous-duty incentives, enlistment bonuses and combat pay in war zones. More than 300 U.S. servicemembers have died this year in Iraq and Afghanistan. "You have to have a good compensation package if you want to recruit and retain the best people," says Pentagon spokeswoman Eileen Lainez. After adjusting for inflation, military compensation rose 84% from 2000 through 2009. By contrast, compensation grew 37% for federal civilian workers and 9% for private sector employees during that time, the BEA reports. The military has met or exceeded its recruiting goals in 2009 and so far this year, helped by a weak economy and the improved compensation. "It's booming here," says Mona Patrick, president of the Jacksonville-Onslow (N.C.) Chamber of Commerce. Construction is robust, she says. Extended-stay hotels are full of military contractors. The Marines have added 10,000 active-duty personnel at Camp Lejeune since 2000 for a total of 48,000, plus 5,000 civilian employees. Places without links to the military were the decade's biggest losers. Doing poorly: • High-tech centers. San Jose, the heart of the Silicon Valley, recorded the nation's biggest decline in income per resident since 2000 — a 23% drop after adjusting for inflation. • College towns. Despite a reputation for economic vibrancy, many well-known college towns — from Boulder, Colo., to Raleigh and Durham, N.C. — registered declining or flat per-capita incomes. • Industrial cities. Falling hardest: Auto supplier Kokomo, Ind., started the decade ranked 128th in per-capita income and ended ranked 293rd. <>Metros with top income gains Metro areas that saw the biggest percentage gains in per-capita income 2000 to 2009 Bureau of Economic Analysis, USA TODAY research Contributing: Tom Vanden Brook Guidelines: You share in the USA TODAY community, so please keep your comments smart and civil. Don't attack other readers personally, and keep your language decent. Use the "Report Abuse" button to make a difference. You share in the USA TODAY community, so please keep your comments smart and civil. Don't attack other readers personally, and keep your language decent. Use the "Report Abuse" button to make a difference. Read more