Pierre Brochu ~ Department of Economics ~ University of
Ottawa
The Minimum Wage, Turnover,
and the Shape of the Wage Distribution
with David
A. Green, Thomas Lemieux and James Townsend
Abstract:
This paper proposes
an empirical approach to decompose the distributional effects of minimum wages
into effects for workers moving out of employment, workers moving into
employment, and workers continuing in employment. We estimate the effects of
the minimum wage on the hazard rate for wages, which provides a convenient way
of re-scaling the wage distribution to control for possible employment effects.
We find that minimum wage increases do not result in an abnormal concentration
of Job Leavers below the new minimum wage, which is inconsistent with
employment effects predicted by a neoclassical model. We also find that, for
Job Stayers, the spike and spillover effects of the minimum wage are simply
shifted right to the new minimum wage. Our findings are consistent with a model
where entry wages are set according to a job ladder, and where firms preserve
their internal wage structure due to fairness or internal incentives issues.
Working Paper, 2023.
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