![]() News Release
Nonprofit workers earn $6.4 billion annually, nonprofit job growth leads other sectors Jobs in Maryland's nonprofit sector have increased more than 3.5 times faster than private sector and government jobs over the past decade and now account for one of every 11 paid positions in the state, a new study shows. According to the study by researchers at Johns Hopkins University, the number of Maryland residents employed by nonprofits grew to 202,635 paid workers by the end of 1999, the latest period for which data is available. That's an increase of 7,221 over 1998 figures and means that nonprofit workers now account for 8.5 percent of the state workforce. The new information on nonprofit employment was released by the Nonprofit Employment Data Project at The Johns Hopkins University, which seeks for the first time to quantify the size and scope of nonprofit employment in Maryland and several other states.
Salamon and Sarah Dewees, project coordinator for the Nonprofit Employment Data Project, are preparing a detailed report, which will be released soon. Among their findings:
The private nonprofit sector is comprised of private universities, schools, hospitals, clinics, day care centers, social service providers, symphonies, museums, art galleries, theaters, environmental organizations and many others. The data in this report draw on reports filed by employers with the Maryland Department of Labor, Licensing and Regulation, and cover the period through the end of 1999. The Center for Civil Society Studies (CCSS) is publishing this report in collaboration with the Maryland Association of Nonprofit Organizations, an association of more than 950 nonprofit organizations representing a wide array of nonprofit activity. For more information, visit the CCSS web site at www.jhu.edu/~ccss/. To arrange an interview with one of the study's authors, please call 410-516-6094.
Go to
Headlines@HopkinsHome Page
|