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Can pay regulation kill? : panel data evidence on the effect of labor markets on hospital performance / Emma Hall, Carol Propper, John Van Reenen.

Author/creator Hall, Emma
Other author/creatorPropper, Carol, 1956-
Other author/creatorVan Reenen, John.
Other author/creatorNational Bureau of Economic Research.
Format Electronic and Book
Publication InfoCambridge, MA : National Bureau of Economic Research,
Description71 p. : ill. ; 22 cm.
Supplemental Content Full text available from NBER Working Papers
Subject(s)
Series NBER working paper series ; working paper 13776
Working paper series (National Bureau of Economic Research) ; working paper no. 13776. UNAUTHORIZED
Abstract Labor market regulation can have harmful unintended consequences. In many markets, especially for public sector workers, pay is regulated to be the same for individuals across heterogeneous geographical labor markets. We would predict that this will mean labor supply problems and potential falls in the quality of service provision in areas with stronger labor markets. In this paper we exploit panel data from the population of English acute hospitals where pay for medical staff is almost flat across the country. We predict that areas with higher outside wages should suffer from problems of recruiting, retaining and motivating high quality workers and this should harm hospital performance. We construct hospital-level panel data on both quality - as measured by death rates (within hospital deaths within thirty days of emergency admission for acute myocardial infarction, AMI) - and productivity. We present evidence that stronger local labor markets significantly worsen hospital outcomes in terms of quality and productivity. A 10% increase in the outside wage is associated with a 4% to 8% increase in AMI death rates. We find that an important part of this effect operates through hospitals in high outside wage areas having to rely more on temporary "agency staff" as they are unable to increase (regulated) wages in order to attract permanent employees. By contrast, we find no systematic role for an effect of outside wages of performance when we run placebo experiments in 42 other service sectors (including nursing homes) where pay is unregulated.
General note"February 2008."
Bibliography noteIncludes bibliographical references.
Access restrictionAvailable only to authorized users.
Other formsAlso issued online.
Technical detailsMode of access: World Wide Web
Genre/formElectronic books.

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