
Ken Moon
· Professor of Operations, Information and DecisionsVerifiedUniversity of Pennsylvania · Operations and Information Management
Active 1978–2026
About
Ken Moon is a Senior Fellow in the Operations, Information and Decisions Department at Wharton. His research focuses on data analytics for workforces and marketplaces, marketplace design, pricing, and matching, as well as structural estimation, machine learning, and econometrics. His work includes empirical measurement and structural modeling of strategic behavior in gig economy workers, analysis of quality improvement incentives in the U.S. hospital industry, and the impact of fake news on echo chambers and information consumption. Additionally, he investigates the effects of worker turnover on manufacturing productivity and product reliability, as well as the timing and benefits of agility in mobile app development. His research contributes to understanding how firms and policymakers can optimize operational efficiency, labor market policies, and digital marketplace design.
Research topics
- Computer Science
- Business
- Computer Security
- Economics
- Industrial organization
- Operations management
- Microeconomics
- Management
- Marketing
- Finance
- Labour economics
- Mathematics
- Clinical psychology
- Medicine
- Neuroscience
- Psychology
- Developmental psychology
- Internet privacy
- Process management
- World Wide Web
- Engineering
Selected publications
Algorithmic Screening and Access in the Gig Economy
SSRN Electronic Journal · 2026-01-01
preprintOpen access1st authorCorrespondingFirst, Do No Harm: Do Staffing Shortages Drive Abuse and Malfeasance in U.S. Nursing Homes?
SSRN Electronic Journal · 2025-01-01
preprintOpen accessCorrespondingWhen Workloads Are Emotional Labor: An Empirical Study of Livestreaming Productivity
SSRN Electronic Journal · 2025-01-01 · 1 citations
preprintOpen accessSenior authorFirst, Do No Harm: Do Staffing Shortages Drive Abuse and Malfeasance in U.S. Nursing Homes?
SSRN Electronic Journal · 2024-01-01
preprintOpen accessToward a More Granular Understanding of Antecedents and Consequences of Employee Mobility
Academy of Management Proceedings · 2023-07-24
articleEmployee mobility has garnered substantial attention across academics and practitioners for its increasing relevance in the modern workplace and its significant impacts on outcomes that drive firm competitive advantage. Despite rich literature on the organizational impacts of employee mobility within and across organizations, it remains unclear when and how organizations are able to reap benefits from employee mobility given that mobility also disrupts shared knowledge, coordination, and relational ties. The proposed symposium serves to develop a deeper understanding of the antecedents and consequences of employee mobility by testing important factors that have been overlooked such as cultural strength and training investments and by making use of granular, big data to identify pathways by which harmful effects of worker mobility are produced and alleviated.
Searching for the Best Yardstick: Cost of Quality Improvements in the U.S. Hospital Industry
Management Science · 2023-07-27 · 4 citations
articleThe Hospital Value-Based Purchasing (VBP) Program is Medicare’s implementation of yardstick incentives applied to hospitals in the United States. Under the VBP Program, 2% of all Medicare payments to hospitals, estimated to be U.S. $1.9 billion in fiscal year 2021, are withheld and redistributed based on their relative performance in the quality of delivered care. We develop a dynamic mean-field equilibrium model in which hospitals are engaged in repeated competition under yardstick incentives. Using structural estimation methods, we recover key parameters that govern hospitals’ decisions to invest in quality improvement, including the financial and nonfinancial costs and uncertain outcomes of investment. By dynamically solving for hospitals’ individually optimal investment policies, we estimate the trajectory of quality improvements for each hospital, including its investment decisions and quality levels throughout the implementation of the VBP Program. Our counterfactual analyses explore the benefits, on the one hand, of modifying the overall size of the yardstick incentives and on the other hand, of implementing a more focused program tailored to hospital type. We find that increasing the size of the incentives from 2% to 4% would have resulted in an additional quality investment of U.S. $1.2 billion from 2011 to 2018, leading to a 3.3% reduction in the average rate of central line-associated bloodstream infections (CLABSIs). Applying yardstick incentives to the tailored hospital peer groups, even without changing the size of the incentives, can lead to an average reduction of 1.4% in the rate of CLABSI among groups of hospitals associated with the highest costs of quality investment. This paper was accepted by Stefan Scholtes, healthcare management. Funding: K. Moon acknowledges support from the Wharton School [Claude Marion Endowed Faculty Scholar Award]. Supplemental Material: The data files and online appendix are available at https://doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.2023.4875 .
An Empirical Study of Blockchain-Driven Transparency in a Consumer Marketplace
SSRN Electronic Journal · 2023-01-01 · 4 citations
articleOpen accessSenior authorManaging Multihoming Workers in the Gig Economy
SSRN Electronic Journal · 2023-01-01 · 3 citations
articleOpen accessMeasuring Strategic Behavior by Gig Economy Workers: Multihoming and Repositioning
SSRN Electronic Journal · 2023-01-01 · 13 citations
articleOpen accessSenior authorDoes Fake News Create Echo Chambers?
SSRN Electronic Journal · 2022 · 5 citations
- Computer Science
- Computer Security
- Business
Frequent coauthors
- 5 shared
Haim Mendelson
Stanford University
- 4 shared
Patrick Bergemann
University of California System
- 4 shared
Gad Allon
University of Pennsylvania
- 4 shared
Kostas Bimpikis
Stanford University
- 4 shared
Prashant Loyalka
- 4 shared
Ying Chen
Guangxi Center for Disease Prevention and Control
- 4 shared
Amandeep Singh
Lovely Professional University
- 3 shared
Wedad Elmaghraby
Labs
Operations, Information and Decisions DepartmentPI
- Resume-aware match score
- Save to shortlist
- AI-drafted outreach
See your match with Ken Moon
PhdFit ranks faculty by your research interests, methods, and publications — grounded in their actual work, not templates.
- Free to start
- No credit card
- 30-second signup