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Research
Results:
Indiana Nonprofit Employment Series
Indiana
Nonprofit Employment: 2007 Report
Nonprofit Employment Report #3
September 2007
Kirsten A. Grønbjerg,
Project Director
Andrea Lewis
Pauline Campbell
Indiana
University
School of Public and Environmental Affairs
Center on Philanthropy
Click here to read
the
press release for this study. Click here
to access the full report (new version
correcting formatting problems uploaded 10/25/07). Note: this is a large
file (2.3 MB) and you will need a free copy of the Acrobat
program to read the documents.
Top | Introduction | Key Findings
| Appendix | Acknowledgements
INTRODUCTION
Click here to access
the introductory section of the report.
Nonprofit organizations
continue to make significant contributions to the quality of life for
Indiana citizens by offering healthcare, education, job training, access
to arts and culture, and opportunities for democratic participation. They
are also a major force in the state's economy and in the economic health
of all the state's regions.
This 2007 report presents
new information on the size, composition, and distribution of paid employment
in the private nonprofit sector in Indiana for the 2001-2005 period, and
updates Report #2, which presented
similar data for the 2001 to 2003 period. It is part of a larger project
on Indiana Nonprofits: Scope and Community
Dimensions, currently underway at Indiana University, designed to
provide solid, baseline information about the Indiana nonprofit sector.
See Research Results for a complete
listing of project components and publications.
The report draws on
data generated by the Indiana Department of Workforce Development through
surveys of Indiana workplaces carried out under the national Covered Employment
and Wages (CEW) labor market information program administered by the U.S.
Bureau of Labor Statistics as part of the unemployment insurance program.
These data, compiled from quarterly reports submitted by employers in
compliance with U.S. and Indiana law, were prepared for us by the Indiana
Business Research Center at Indiana University under a confidentiality
agreement with the state.
For information about
the methodology used in this report and for separate tables with data
for Indiana counties and metropolitan regions and for selected industries
in which Indiana nonprofits are prominent, please see the Appendix
at the bottom of this page.
Top | Introduction | Key Findings
| Appendix | Acknowledgements
Key
findings
Click here to access
Update, Part I and Conclusion of
our report, which provides detailed analysis of nonprofit employment for
the state as a whole over the 2001 to 2005 period. Part
II highlights nonprofit employment for the state's fourteen Metropolitan
Statistical Areas, while Part III provides
detailed analysis for each of the state's eleven Economic Growth Regions.
Major
Updates from 2005 Report
- Nonprofit employment
increased by more than 2 percent between 2003 and 2005, while for-profit
employment increased by just over 2 percent and government employment
by less than 1 percent. Since 2001, nonprofit employment increased by
5 percent and government employment by about 3 percent, while for-profit
employment was down about 1 percent.
- The gap between
nonprofit and for-profit payrolls narrowed since our previous report,
as did that between nonprofit and government payrolls. Between 2001
and 2003 total nonprofit payrolls increased by more than 10 percent,
while for-profit payrolls increased by just over 8 percent and government
payrolls by nearly 7 percent. From 2001 to 2005, nonprofit payroll was
up 22 percent, while government and for-profit payrolls were up respectively
13 and 10 percent.
- The gap between
nonprofit and for-profit average weekly wages decreased by $11 over
the 2003-2005 period, and that between nonprofit and government weekly
wages decreased by $12. Over the entire 2001 to 2005 period, the gap
between nonprofit and for-profit average weekly wages declined by $14
and that between nonprofit and government weekly wages declined by $20.
Other
Key Findings
- The nonprofit sector
continues to be a major economic force in Indiana, accounting for nearly
1 out of every 12 paid workers--equal to the number of employees in
the state's entire accommodation and food industry and about 50 percent
more than those employed in the state's construction industry.
- The 235,000 nonprofit
employees in Indiana earned about $7.4 billion in wages in 2005.
- About half (51
percent) of nonprofit employment in the state was in health services,
another 13 percent was in education, and 12 percent each was in membership
associations and social assistance.
- Most (88 percent)
nonprofit employees worked for charities, although only 56 percent of
nonprofit establishments were charities.
- The Indiana nonprofit
sector grew faster than both the for-profit and government sectors between
2003 and 2005.
- The growth share
and rate of growth in nonprofit employment were concentrated in health
and educational services, especially between 2004 and 2005.
- Overall payroll
for nonprofit employees in Indiana also increased faster than that for
employees in for-profit or government organizations, although average
weekly wages increased at a slightly slower rate.
- On average, weekly
wages for nonprofit employees were 13 percent lower than those of for-profit
workers and 11 percent lower than those of government workers . However,
non-profit weekly wages were generally similar to for-profit wages in
industries where nonprofit employment is concentrated.
- Nonprofit employment
grew steadily each quarter between 2003 and 2005, while there were notable
seasonal fluctuations in for-profit and government employment.
- The majority (80
percent) of nonprofit employment in Indiana was concentrated in fourteen
metropolitan areas, with 28 percent in the Indianapolis area. Nonprofit
share of total employment, average weekly wages, and employment rates
of growth varied significantly among these metropolitan areas (see Part
II).
- Among Indiana's
11 Economic Growth Regions (EGRs), EGR 5 (Central Indiana) had the largest
share of the state's nonprofit employment. Nonprofit share of total
employment, average weekly wages, and rates of growth in employment
and payroll varied considerably among the different regions (see Part
III for a summary and separate chapters on each EGR, includes also
overall conclusion to report).
Top | Introduction | Key Findings
| Appendix | Acknowledgements
APPENDICES
Our report includes
several appendices with supplementary information. Click here to access
the full set of appendices. They include:
- Appendix
A: The ES202 Employment
Insurance Labor Market Program
- Appendix B:
Nonprofit Employment in Indiana, by Metropolitan Statistical Area, 2005
- Appendix C:
Nonprofit Employment in Indiana, by Economic Growth Region, 2005
- Appendix D:
Nonprofit Employment in Indiana, by County, 2005
- Appendix E:
Distribution of Nonprofit and Charitable Employment in Indiana, by Industry,
2005
- Appendix F:
Nonprofit Employment and Wages for Select Industries in Indiana, 2005
- Appendix G:
For-profit Employment and Wages for Select Industries in Indiana, 2005
- Appendix H:
Government Employment and Wages for Select Industries in Indiana, 2005
- Appendix I:
Distribution of Indiana Nonprofit Employment by IRS Reporting Status,
2001-2005
- List of project
publications and reports
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This report
was prepared as part of an ongoing project on the Indiana
Nonprofit Sector: Scope and Community Dimensions made possible
by the support for the Efroymson Chair in Philanthropy by the Efroymson
Fund at the Central Indiana Community Foundation; the Indiana University
Center on Philanthropy's Indiana Research Fund, supported in part by Lilly
Endowment Inc.; and the School of Public and Environmental Affairs at
Indiana University.
We are
grateful to Carol O. Rogers, Victoria Nelson, and Jerry Conover at the
Indiana Business Research Center for making the data on which this report
is based available to us and for very helpful comments on the draft. We
also thank Kerry S. Brock for her help in preparing the basic framework
for our analysis. Finally, we thank members of the Advisory
Board for the Indiana Nonprofit Sector:
Scope and Community Dimensions project for helpful comments and suggestions.
We are particularly grateful to Thomas P. Miller and his staff (Justin
Heet and Jonathan Faris), Tom Rugh of the Indiana Association of United
Ways, and Bob Cross of United Way of Central Indiana for helpful comments
on our analysis plan.
Updated
October 25, 2007
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