Major Employers
The following is a list of the top 10 Ohioan employers in Ohio.
| Rank | Employer | Number of Ohio employees | Headquarters location |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Kroger | 38,000 | Cincinnati, Ohio |
| 2 | Cleveland Clinic Health System | 37,800 | Cleveland, Ohio |
| 3 | Catholic Healthcare Partners | 28,200 | Cincinnati, Ohio |
| 4 | Wright Patterson Air Force Base | 27,400 | Dayton, Ohio |
| 5 | The Ohio State University | 26,800 | Columbus, Ohio |
| 6 | University Hospitals of Cleveland | 21,800 | Cleveland, Ohio |
| 7 | OhioHealth | 15,300 | Columbus, Ohio |
| 8 | ProMedica | 14,500 | Toledo, Ohio |
| 9 | Premier Health Partners | 14,000 | Dayton, Ohio |
| 10 | Procter and Gamble | 14,000 | Cincinnati, Ohio |
The following is a list of the top Ohioan employers anywhere in the world.
| Rank | Employer | Number of Ohio employees | Headquarters location |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Wal-Mart | 54,200 | Bentonville, Arkansas |
| 2 | Kroger | 38,000 | Cincinnati, Ohio |
| 3 | Cleveland Clinic Health System | 37,800 | Cleveland, Ohio |
| 4 | Catholic Healthcare Partners | 28,200 | Cincinnati, Ohio |
| 5 | Wright Patterson Air Force Base | 27,400 | Dayton, Ohio |
| 6 | The Ohio State University | 26,800 | Columbus, Ohio |
| 7 | University Hospitals of Cleveland | 21,800 | Cleveland, Ohio |
| 8 | JP Morgan Chase | 17,500 | New York, New York |
| 9 | Giant Eagle | 17,000 | Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania |
| 10 | Sears Holdings Corp | 16,400 | Hoffman Estates, Illinois |
Read more about this topic: Economy Of Ohio
Famous quotes containing the words major and/or employers:
“As a novelist, I cannot occupy myself with characters, or at any rate central ones, who lack panache, in one or another sense, who would be incapable of a major action or a major passion, or who have not a touch of the ambiguity, the ultimate unaccountability, the enlarging mistiness of persons in history. History, as more austerely I now know it, is not romantic. But I am.”
—Elizabeth Bowen (18991973)
“The industrial world would be a more peaceful place if workers were called in as collaborators in the process of establishing standards and defining shop practices, matters which surely affect their interests and well-being fully as much as they affect those of employers and consumers.”
—Mary Barnett Gilson (1877?)