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Price Ceilings and Floors. Effects on market equilibrium; Assessing winners and losers;. SURVEY. Have you worked in a minimum wage job? If yes, what was the job? Do you support increasing the minimum wage by $1.00?. Outline. Historical Evolution of Minimum Wage Conventional Analysis
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Price Ceilings and Floors Effects on market equilibrium; Assessing winners and losers;
SURVEY • Have you worked in a minimum wage job? • If yes, what was the job? • Do you support increasing the minimum wage by $1.00?
Outline • Historical Evolution of Minimum Wage • Conventional Analysis • How Do You Prove an Economic Theory? • Empirical Evidence on the Minimum Wage • Reconciling Results with Theory • Assessing Costs & Benefits • Policy Alternatives
1888-1916. Establishment of Government’s Legal Authority to Regulate Labor Markets 1931-36. Minimum wage legislation passed by Connecticut, Illinois, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Utah and D.C. 1937. Fair Labor Standards Act established federal minimum wage of $0.25 1st year; $0.30, the next 6 yrs. Narrow coverage. Numerous exemptions. 1949-1966. Increases in minimum wage in 1949,55,61. Historical Perspectives
1966. The FLSA amended to cover agricultural workers and some public employees. Increased minimum wage to $1.40 an hour. 1972. Education Amendments established minimum wages for employees of public and private schools 1977. Minimum wage became $2.65 an hour effective 1978; $2.90 an hour in 1979, $3.10 an hour in 1980 and $3.35 in 1981. Congress established the Federal Minimum Wage Study Commission. 1990. Minimum wage increased to $4.25 More Coverage Post ‘66
Current Law • As of 9/1/97, minimum wage is $5.15. • Some employees are not covered. • Special exemptions available for student learners, full time students, persons with disabilities • Penalties for violations can include criminal prosecution. Typical penalty is $1000 fine.
Who Earns the Minimum Wage? • 57.9% Are Women • 25.6% Are Teens • 47.2% Work Full-Time • 44.3% Work in Retail Trade • 38.8% Are the Only Wage Earner • 11.7% Are Teens in Families with Above Average Incomes • 39.6% Are in Families in the Bottom Fifth of Income Distribution. Source: Mischel, L. et al, 1993, “Who Wins With A Higher Minimum Wage?” EPI briefing paper. IWPR, “Women and the Minimum Wage, 1995
The Conventional Analysis • Wage rate increases with binding constraint • Increase in the quantity supplied of labor • Decrease in the quantity demanded • Fall in employment rate; Increase in unemployment rate • Increase in costs of production for affected industries • Increase in prices paid by consumers • More elastic demand for labor, the greater the fall in employment
How Do We Prove This Theory? • The “Economist’s Laboratory’ • Defining a control group • Regression Analysis • Time Series Data • Other Factors affect employment and unemployment. • Minimum Wage increases not independent of labor market conditions. • Cross Sectional Data • Case Studies of States/Industries
Empirical Evidence • Time Series data • Cross Sectional Studies • Card and Krueger book • Response to Card and Krueger • Neumark and Wascher
Criticisms of Card and Krueger • Their data is fatally flawed. • They focus only on short term effects. Employers may be slow to adjust to higher minimum wage. • Consumers may substitute between more expensive restaurant food and fast food. The increase in demand would offset the effects of higher minimum wage.
What Do We Know? • Effects on teenage employment, if negative, are small • Studies suggest the effect is smaller today than 15-20 years ago. • School enrollment decreases as minimum wage increases.
Why Isn’t There a Bigger Effect? • Minimum Wage not binding • Neumark and Wascher, 1996 • Brown, 1996. • Heterogeneity of teenagers • Neumark and Wascher, 1996 • Monopsony Model • Card and Krueger, 1995
Reconciling Results with Theory • Data is wrong • Minimum Wage not binding • Labor Markets are not competitive • Labor supply and demand not measured in quality units.
Policy Issues • Why Is the Minimum Wage Popular with Politicians? • Does the Minimum Wage Reduce Poverty? • Alternatives to Increasing the Minimum Wage
The Minimum Wage and Poverty • With no employment consequences, increase in minimum wage increases incomes of minimum wage workers. • Not all minimum wage workers are poor. • Estimated impact on poverty rate is small.