Title
The Salaries of Ph.D's in Academe and Elsewhere
Author(s)
Albert Rees Albert Rees (Princeton University)
Abstract
Median salaries of Ph. D's are substantially higher for those in nonacademic employment that for those employed by colleges and universities, even after salaries paid on an academic year basis are adjusted upward to a full-year basis. The differences can be seen both in cross-section estimates for 1987 and in fixed effect estimates based on data for Ph. D's who changed sectors between 1985 and 1987. The most likely explanation of these differences is that they are compensating differentials reflecting the advantages of academic employment, including greater autonomy and (for those with tenure) greater job security.
Creation Date
1991-06
Section URL ID
IRS
Paper Number
286
URL
https://dataspace.princeton.edu/bitstream/88435/dsp019k41zd490/1/286.pdf
File Function
Jel
H6
Keyword(s)
doctorate recipients, salaries, academic institutions, compensating differentials
Suppress
false
Series
1