Industry or Academia, Basic or Applied? Career Choices and Earnings Trajectories of Scientists

Industry or Academia, Basic or Applied? Career Choices and Earnings Trajectories of Scientists

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Article ID: iaor20132425
Volume: 59
Issue: 4
Start Page Number: 950
End Page Number: 970
Publication Date: Apr 2013
Journal: Management Science
Authors: ,
Keywords: life cycle assessment, professional employment, labour market
Abstract:

We extend life cycle models of human capital investments by incorporating matching theory to examine the sorting pattern of heterogeneous scientists into different career trajectories. We link differences in physical capital investments and complementarities between basic and applied scientists across industry and academic settings to individual differences in scientist ability and preferences to predict an equilibrium matching of scientists to careers and to their earnings evolution. Our empirical analysis, using the National Science Foundation's Scientists and Engineers Statistical Data System database, is consistent with theoretical predictions of (i) sorting by ability into basic versus applied science among academic scientists, but not among industry scientists; and (ii) sorting by higher taste for nonmonetary returns into academia over industry. The evolution of an earnings profile is consistent with these sorting patterns: the earnings trajectories of basic and applied scientists are distinct from each other in academia but are similar in industry.

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