This paper examines the earnings differentials among hospital workers in the public, private nonprofit, and private for-profit sectors. Utilizing data from the 1995 through 2007 Current Population Surveys, unadjusted earnings are highest in the private nonprofit sector and lowest in private for-profit firms. Once measurable characteristics are accounted for, health practitioners in for-profit and nonprofit hospitals earn similar wages while public sector workers earn small but significant wage penalties. Nonprofit hospitals tend to attract workers with higher levels of skill as measured by schooling and potential experience. This could be explained in part by worker sorting and lower cost containment incentives in nonprofit hospitals. Wage ...
There are three objectives in this paper. First is to show the existence of wage differentials. The ...
This article provides new estimates of the nonprofit/for-profit wage differential in the U.S. econom...
This paper examines how the managerial labor market in nonprofit hospitals has adjusted to the finan...
This paper examines the earnings differentials among hospital workers in the public, private nonprof...
How the behavior of non-profit organizations differs from that of for-profit organizations has been ...
Two competing theories argue that the nonprofit sector pays differently: Nonprofit employees may acc...
Two hospitals compete for the exclusive services of health professionals, who are privately informed...
Registered nurses (RNs) employed in hospitals realize a large wage advantage relative to RNs employe...
The author is grateful to J. Rubin and L. Russell for comments and Lisa Parochniak for research ass...
FROM THE ARTICLE: When it comes to social institutions, not-for-profit organizations (NFPs) allegedl...
The hospital market is served by firms that are private for-profit, private not-for-profit, and gove...
My study examines the effect of regulatory pressures on the earnings management behavior of nonprofi...
In this paper, we examine whether labor markets for health workers affect health outcomes in hospita...
gratefully acknowledged. Any errors in the paper are my own. I exploit a change in hospital financia...
The issue of differential quality in for-profit (FP) and not-for-profit (NFP) hospitals remains a cr...
There are three objectives in this paper. First is to show the existence of wage differentials. The ...
This article provides new estimates of the nonprofit/for-profit wage differential in the U.S. econom...
This paper examines how the managerial labor market in nonprofit hospitals has adjusted to the finan...
This paper examines the earnings differentials among hospital workers in the public, private nonprof...
How the behavior of non-profit organizations differs from that of for-profit organizations has been ...
Two competing theories argue that the nonprofit sector pays differently: Nonprofit employees may acc...
Two hospitals compete for the exclusive services of health professionals, who are privately informed...
Registered nurses (RNs) employed in hospitals realize a large wage advantage relative to RNs employe...
The author is grateful to J. Rubin and L. Russell for comments and Lisa Parochniak for research ass...
FROM THE ARTICLE: When it comes to social institutions, not-for-profit organizations (NFPs) allegedl...
The hospital market is served by firms that are private for-profit, private not-for-profit, and gove...
My study examines the effect of regulatory pressures on the earnings management behavior of nonprofi...
In this paper, we examine whether labor markets for health workers affect health outcomes in hospita...
gratefully acknowledged. Any errors in the paper are my own. I exploit a change in hospital financia...
The issue of differential quality in for-profit (FP) and not-for-profit (NFP) hospitals remains a cr...
There are three objectives in this paper. First is to show the existence of wage differentials. The ...
This article provides new estimates of the nonprofit/for-profit wage differential in the U.S. econom...
This paper examines how the managerial labor market in nonprofit hospitals has adjusted to the finan...