Volunteer hiring, organizational form and the provision of mission-oriented goods
Volunteer hiring, organizational form and the provision of mission-oriented goods
Mission-oriented organizations, such as nonprofit organizations and NGOs, rely critically on volunteer recruitment to achieve their organizational goals. Besides serving as an outlet of altruistic motives, volunteering often acts as a stepping-stone for a paid position in the nonprofit sector. This paper provides an explanation for the fact that nonprofit employers are uniquely able to attract such volunteers with social concerns and career aspirations and for the related observation that nonprofits figure prominently in mission-related activities. Our theory is predicated on that - by committing to not distributing profits - nonprofit incorporation relaxes the incentive constraint that employers face when implicitly contracting with volunteers, without relying on ex ante differences in workers' preferences over the employer's identity or inherent asymmetries between nonprofit and for-profit providers. The not-for-profit commitment is shown to be effective only in activities where producers, who can choose to be for-profit or nonprofit, care about the level or quality of the service being provided. Thus, in the equilibrium of the model developed here nonprofit entry in sectors where missions play a defining role and the hiring of volunteers arise endogenously due to economic forces. This equilibrium outcome has some desirable welfare properties.
volunteers, nonprofit institutions, privately provided public goods
University of Southampton
Vlassopoulos, Michael
2d557227-958c-4855-92a8-b74b398f95c7
1 September 2007
Vlassopoulos, Michael
2d557227-958c-4855-92a8-b74b398f95c7
Vlassopoulos, Michael
(2007)
Volunteer hiring, organizational form and the provision of mission-oriented goods
(Discussion Papers in Economics and Econometrics, 707)
Southampton, UK.
University of Southampton
52pp.
Record type:
Monograph
(Discussion Paper)
Abstract
Mission-oriented organizations, such as nonprofit organizations and NGOs, rely critically on volunteer recruitment to achieve their organizational goals. Besides serving as an outlet of altruistic motives, volunteering often acts as a stepping-stone for a paid position in the nonprofit sector. This paper provides an explanation for the fact that nonprofit employers are uniquely able to attract such volunteers with social concerns and career aspirations and for the related observation that nonprofits figure prominently in mission-related activities. Our theory is predicated on that - by committing to not distributing profits - nonprofit incorporation relaxes the incentive constraint that employers face when implicitly contracting with volunteers, without relying on ex ante differences in workers' preferences over the employer's identity or inherent asymmetries between nonprofit and for-profit providers. The not-for-profit commitment is shown to be effective only in activities where producers, who can choose to be for-profit or nonprofit, care about the level or quality of the service being provided. Thus, in the equilibrium of the model developed here nonprofit entry in sectors where missions play a defining role and the hiring of volunteers arise endogenously due to economic forces. This equilibrium outcome has some desirable welfare properties.
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Published date: 1 September 2007
Keywords:
volunteers, nonprofit institutions, privately provided public goods
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Local EPrints ID: 47663
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/47663
ISSN: 0966-4246
PURE UUID: 8ecc3239-9fa8-4878-906c-a0cd602094ee
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Date deposited: 07 Aug 2007
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:55
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