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When Nurses Travel: Labor Supply Elasticity During COVID-19 Surges

Author

Listed:
  • Joshua D. Gottlieb

    (University of Chicago - Harris School of Public Policy; NBER)

  • Avi Zenilman

    (Yale University - Yale School of Nursing)

Abstract

We study how short-term labor markets responded to an extraordinary demand shock during the COVID-19 pandemic. We study traveling nurse jobs—a market hospitals use to ï¬ ll temporary staffing needs—to examine workers’ willingness to move to places with larger demand shocks. We find a dramatic increase in market size during the pandemic, especially for those specialties central to COVID-19 care. The number of jobs increased far more than compensation, suggesting that nurses’ willingness to travel is very responsive to compensation. To examine workers’ willingness to move across different locations, we examine jobs in different locations on the same day, and find even more responsive labor supply. We show that part of this supply responsiveness comes from workers’ willingness to travel longer distances for jobs when payment increases, suggesting that an integrated national market facilitates reallocating workers when demand surges. This implies that a simultaneous national demand spike might be harder for the market to accommodate rapidly.

Suggested Citation

  • Joshua D. Gottlieb & Avi Zenilman, 2020. "When Nurses Travel: Labor Supply Elasticity During COVID-19 Surges," Working Papers 2020-166, Becker Friedman Institute for Research In Economics.
  • Handle: RePEc:bfi:wpaper:2020-166
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    References listed on IDEAS

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