In: Economics
Nursing "Shortages": Monopsony Power in the Market for Registered Nurses?
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A shortage of nurses has been acute for several years. The buyer's
side of the labor market for hospital behaves like a monopsony or
classical oligopsony. Nurses are frequently secondary wage earners,
thus declines the elasticity of supply in specific area. Moreover
as job requires special skills in the profession and as there are
not high number of occupation which are close substitutes. Due to
low mobility of the nurses across jobs and high concentration of
the hospitals give rise to monopsony or classical oligopsony in the
local areas. Exploitation, if occurs, can aggravate the concern of
shortage because a high turnover rate is also observed in such
labor market
To summarize, in most of the areas the number of hospitals
(employers) are very limited, and such concentrated and localized
nature of the industry usually gives the employers certain market
power and allows them to impose lower than the competitive wages
and higher workloads on the workers (nurses), resulting to the
alleged monopsonistic/oligopsonistic exploitation. The problem is
also aggravated due to the lack of mobility.