Minimum Wage Laws
The minimum wage warriors seem reluctant to accept the economic realities: price and wage controls never work.
~ Aristotle Sabouni
Created: 2017-05-20 |
There are a few discredited studies (like Card & Krueger) show that raising minimum wage doesn't have large impacts, in a few situations, for short periods of time. But each study like that has dozens of rebuttals and refutations that show the flaws in their methodology, and counter studies that it does impact employment (and wages), in the wrong way. So if you see a Study or News that claims minimum wage doesn't hurt employment, you know it's Fake / Propaganda.
Thought Experiments[edit | edit source]
I like to use thought experiments and the socratic method to try to get min-wage supporters to think. Not that you'll ever get good answers, but it shows the absurdity of their positions:
- What's a fair wage for both NYC and B.F. Idaho?
- If $15/hr is good, why not $150/hr? (Every answer why $150 is bad also applies to $15)
- If I raised your salary by 5%, but the cost of everything you buy by 10%, would you come out ahead? (Costs of labor/overhead are added, with margins, at many stages in a supply chain)
- If price and wage controls worked (fundametnally what a minimum wage is), why didn't they work in Cuba, North Korea, Russia, China, or the U.S. and U.K. during WWII and in the 70's? (They only succeeded in blossoming black markets).
- If only 9% of minimum wage workers are below the poverty line (and 91% are not), wouldn't giving money directly to that 9% be at least 11x as effective as raising minimum wage? Why don't we do that instead?
- If minimum wage is a starting salary, why should it have an ending value (be a livable wage)?
- If I’m willing to pay someone $10 to do something, and they’re willing to take $10 to do it, what business is it of the government or voters? Where in the Constitution does it say that anyone else gets a say in that transaction?
- Who knows more what's a fair labor value for a job, in every market in the U.S.: the employer and employee involved, or a bureaucrat in D.C. or voter in Barstow? Why?
And so on. To understand minimum wage arguments, read on.
Money is a token of output, not desire[edit | edit source]
The first thing to understand is that money is derived from the product of work (productivity/results), and the value someone places on that, not based on what you paid for it. Thus wages aren’t based on “need” or “want”, but on value (output/returns). Raising the costs for something by paying more, slows the economy. Lowering the costs, means you can afford more and improves the economy. If you don’t understand this, please go read about the broken window fallacy. There are many more consumers than producers, so drops in labor costs help more people than it hurts (net win), and raising labor costs raises the cost of goods by at least as much (plus margins at many levels of manufacture and distribution), hurting far more people than it helps. Thus “needs based” economics, isn’t economics, it’s long disproven socialist rhetoric that helps the few by hurting the many.
Key Concepts[edit | edit source]
Minimum Wage Laws • [6 items]
Does minimum wage impact employment? |
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The problem is that minimum wage doesn't always immediately cause noticable unemployment (some exceptions). But as soon as you look deeper you find it suppresses growth, increases a decline. Sometimes people reacted knowing the increase was coming. It hits certain segments harder than others (teens, starting out, part time work, and so on). |
Goldilocks and 3 wages |
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Minimum wage is like Goldilocks, there are three ways you can set minimum wage: too low, too high, and just right. Too low, means it's doing nothing of value. Too high means it's hurting employment and growth. And since just right can never apply to two different people, places or moments in time, there's really only one way to set minimum wage: and that's at the wrong level. |
Livable Wage |
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Progressives often see the choice as: (a) A livable minimum wage (b) A lower minimum wage... But the reality is: (a) What the market will bear (b) Unemployment ($0/hour). So the choice isn't pulling people out of poverty or not, it's what value an opportunity is worth to an employer, before they automate, outsource, or just give up (skip the job) -- and the person is unemployed. |
Minimum Wage and Automation |
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Value (Money) is derived from the product of work (productivity/results), not based on what you paid for it. Thus the less you pay, the better off you are. Despite Social Justice Warriors (also known as economically illiterates) will tell you, minimum wage is not good, you can't lose more money on every transaction and make it up in volume. |
Minimum Wage: Cost basis |
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I hear all the time, that McDonald’s can afford to pay a “livable wage” without raising costs, or "it’s just a few cents a burger", by people that don’t understand basic economics, or business. Doing the math? The avg McD's sees ≈$150K in profits, and this would rause costs by ≈$250K, putting them in the red by $100K. They will pass that $4.50/order on to customers. |
Minimum Wage: Poverty |
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Poverty and who makes minimum wage is complex: 75% of it is due to underemployment (which is more insidious than unemployment), Most poverty is short term (<1 year), Most of the rest is due to under-education, immigration, fatherless families, and social program programs that hold people down. Explain how raising minimum wage helps with those things. |
Minimum wage hasn’t kept up with inflation[edit | edit source]
There is a popular falsehood among the uninformed and gullible that minimum wage hasn’t kept up with inflation. This is based on the fallacy that it should keep up with inflation (or that minimum wage is a good thing at all). Since many on our left and their media allies seem culturally incapable of checking a fact, this serves a great political purpose at getting them worked up on the injustice of their ignorance. But that doesn’t make it any more true, or worse, a more valid an argument that it should. But the facts are that minimum wage was about $4.00/hr originally (adjusted to 2102 dollars), if it’s over that now, then you know their claim is false.
- http://riderrants.blogspot.com/2016/04/contrary-to-myth-us-minimum-wage-has.html
- https://www.dol.gov/featured/minimum-wage/chart1
- http://www.usinflationcalculator.com
Removing minimum wage[edit | edit source]
Quite often, I hear the argument, "I suppose you think minimum wage should be $0". It's not me, it's the NYT, many economists and so on, that think that. The uninformed think that means that people would work for $0/hr. But of course they would not. In many places the least you can pay is $15, in others it's $5. That's not counting that many people can get paid more for not working than working (social programs). This is why when unemployment benefits expire, the number of employed goes up. The point is again, Goldilocks and the three wages, too low, does nothing. Too high hurts jobs. And just right doesn't exist. So if you let the market decide, everything fixes itself, far more than politicians and voters know what the right wage is for everyone, everywhere, for every time.
In the free market, everyone works for what they're willing to work for, you get full employment, then demand exceeds supply of labor, and wages go up. It's self balancing. When you raise the minimum wages, jobs disappear, then supply exceeds demand, and wages and conditions go down to meet the floor you set legislatively. The market bears more than the minimum wage in most cities, which is why minimum wage raises don't matter or hurt/help. If the average wage is already higher, then raising it does nothing for most people. But if you apply that same rate to a poorer area, where the wages are much lower, you don't help people out -- you make it unaffordable to hire.
- Before the NYT became the DNC's pamphlet, they agreed that minimum wage hurts jobs: http://www.nytimes.com/1987/01/14/opinion/the-right-minimum-wage-0.00.html
Politics behind minimum wage[edit | edit source]
Politicians are professionals, who have large staffs of people to inform them on policies. They either know this stuff below, or they have no smart people on their staff -- thus I think most likely their support of minimum wage is a calculated decision to put politics (and their needs) over other people. All you have to do is follow the money, and who supports it the most, and think, "why?".
The real genius in the campaign to increase the minimum wage is that it provides the left with a platform to once again proclaim solidarity with the downtrodden (funded of course with other peoples' money), and they get to vilify anyone that defends the economy, which they know the right will do. This is a win politically for the left, because to their base, they sound like they care. When the inevitable reduction in entry-level jobs occurs because of minimum wage hikes, the result will be many more citizens (voters) who become dependent on the largess of the government (democrats). As they say, "Before they raised minimum wage, I was living paycheck to paycheck. Now I'm living welfare check to welfare check." Two positive results from one initiative (vilifying the other side, and creating more dependent voters), if you ignore the consequences to people.
Most of all, the Federal Minimum Wage is a way for larger/richer States (blue states) to attack/tax labor in smaller developing states and rural areas (red states) by artificially driving up the rural areas costs of labor to more closely match their own. This is why blue politicians (California, Massachusetts, etc) fight for increases in minimum wage (blue politicians), especially nationally -- where it's none of their business. While the Red states know that it is their lower costs of labor that is attracting jobs and growth away from the red states, and helping their areas to grow. Thus there's no egalitarianism in the min-wage supporters campaigns (at least not the politicians), they're trying to hurt other states/areas, or they'd just raise their own minimum wages and not worry about what other areas or states are doing.
So whenever you hear a Sanders or Warren talking about raising the minimum wage, remember it's not to help poor appalachians or working poor in steel towns, they're out to harm them. Reducing the differential labor costs, and respective costs of living, hurts the red states and helps the blue states. Thus, the minimum wage is a proxy fight to disguise blue politicians harming other states, as "help for the poor". Thus supporting the minimum wage is just a vote to let the most populous and rich states bully and bureaucratize the more agile, competitive and smaller states, all in the name of the greater good.
- It hurts poor states (areas) more than rich ones: http://economics21.org/commentary/why-poor-states-reject-minimum-wage-hike
Conclusion[edit | edit source]
The universe, math and economics doesn’t care about your situation, it cares about net value to the economy. So you have an ailing Mom, or 19 kids and counting, in the real world your value to the employer is based on your output/productivity: what you do, and how much it costs to do it. If you cost more than the returns, you’re unemployed (and that will make your situation much worse). If you cost more than a worker in China, or a robot that can do half your job, you’re unemployed. It’s nothing personal. If you care about those people, then you want to help them get jobs and stay employed, and raising the costs to hire them does the opposite.
Economics is the science of incentives. Yet the anti-economists that support minimum wage think that if a price is too high (think housing rents), the government can push it down and nothing bad will happen, or if a price is too low (think wages), government can push it up and nothing bad will happened. This defies science of economics and logic, and that people adapt to incentives, not mandates.
Why would they do this (support programs that make the problem worse)? Well, there’s the truly ignorant that don’t know better and have ignored all the research (e.g. they really are that uninformed). But worse is those that know better; if you’re the party that get votes by the people on the bottom, nothing will build your base faster than making sure there’s more people on the bottom… especially if the least educated they think you’re helping (when you’re just making more of them). If democrats fixed the problems with, they’d lose their base — thus there’s incentives for them to only make the problems worse. Thus the science of incentives says that there’s an incentive for democrats (minimum wage supporters) to be liars, and the only thing resisting that is those that oppose the people harming policies of the left.
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🔗 Links
- http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2017-04-18/harvard-shock-study-each-1-minimum-wage-hike-causes-4-10-increase-restaurant-failure
- https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2951110 - Harvard Study on minimum wage
- CBO charts the impact of minimum wage increases on unemployment: https://www.cbo.gov/publication/44995
- Meer & West Study: Effects of the Minimum Wage on Employment Dynamics: http://web.archive.org/web/20150331050717/http://econweb.tamu.edu/jmeer/Meer_West_Minimum_Wage.pdf
- Clemens & Wither Paper : The Minimum Wage and the Great Recession: Evidence of Effects on the Employment and Income Trajectories of Low-Skilled Workers: http://www.nber.org/papers/w20724
- Sabia, Burkhauser, and Hansen (2012)
- Hoffman and Trace (2009)
- Singell and Terborg (2007)
- Neumark, Salas, and Wascher (2013)
- Flawed Memes: https://fee.org/articles/minimum-wage-memes-what-they-miss-and-how-they-mislead/
Minimum wage and job growth:
- http://www.aei-ideas.org/2014/05/the-minimum-wage-and-job-growth/
- http://www.forbes.com/sites/johngoodman/2015/03/05/who-is-more-anti-science-republicans-or-democrats/2/
- When the minimum wage was increased in 1967, economist Masanori Hashimoto found that workers gained 32 cents in money income but lost 41 cents per hour in training — a net loss of 9 cents an hour in full-income compensation.
- Linda Leighton and Jacob Mincer in one study, and Belton Fleisher in another, concluded that increases in the minimum wage reduce on-the-job training and, as a result, dampen long-run growth in the real incomes of covered workers.
- Additionally, North Carolina State University economist Walter Wessels determined that a wage increase caused New York retailers to increase work demands. In most stores, fewer workers were given fewer hours to do the same work as before.
- Mindy Marks found that the $0.90 per hour increase in the federal minimum-wage rate in 1990 reduced the probability of workers receiving employer-provided health insurance from 66.2 percent to 63.1 percent, and increased the likelihood that covered workers would be reduced to part-time work by 26 percent.
- Wessels also found that for every 10 percent increase in the minimum wage, workers lose 2 percent of nonmonetary compensation per hour. Extrapolating from Wessels’ estimates, an increase in the federal minimum wage from $7.25 to only $9.00 an hour would make covered workers worse off by 35 cents an hour.
- Writing in the Wall Street Journal, economist Thomas MaCurdy explained: “Overall, the extra costs attributable to higher prices equaled 0.63% of the nondurable goods purchased by the poorest fifth of families and 0.52% of the goods purchased by the top fifth—with the percentage falling as the income level rose. The higher prices, in other words, resembled a regressive value-added, or sales, tax, with rates rising the lower a family’s income…”… “My analysis concludes that more poor families were losers than winners from the 1996 hike in the minimum wage. Nearly one in five low-income families benefited, but all low-income families paid for the increase through higher prices.” : https://www.wsj.com/articles/thomas-macurdy-the-minimum-wage-stealth-tax-on-the-poor-1424644567
- http://www.aei-ideas.org/2014/03/500-economists-assert-the-irrefutable-laws-of-demand-and-supply-and-slam-the-minimim-wage-hike-as-a-jobs-killer/
- http://washingtonexaminer.com/over-500-economists-slam-minimum-wage-hike-as-a-jobs-killer/article/2545532
- http://www.forbes.com/sites/jamesdorn/2013/05/07/the-minimum-wage-delusion-and-the-death-of-common-sense/
- http://economics21.org/commentary/fair-minimum-wage-act-fails-practice
- Even Paul Krugman was against minimum wage, before he was for it: http://www.forbes.com/sites/timworstall/2015/03/02/paul-krugmans-amazing-about-face-on-the-minimum-wage/#2715e4857a0b7af4ff051096
- Bill Gates opines on automation replacing people (and that happens faster as wages go up): http://www.businessinsider.com/bill-gates-bots-are-taking-away-jobs-2014-3
- It hurts poor states more than rich states: http://economics21.org/commentary/why-poor-states-reject-minimum-wage-hike
- http://reason.com/archives/2016/04/06/when-did-the-us-repeal-the-laws-of-suppl
- Minimum Wages Surged In 6 Cities Last Year: jobs down in those 6 cities: http://www.investors.com/news/economy/hiring-slowed-where-minimum-wage-surged-in-2015/
- Sure it eliminates jobs, but they’re lousy jobs: https://www.commentarymagazine.com/american-society/the-left-lets-the-veil-drop-minimum-wage/
- http://www.epi.org/publication/importance-study-design-minimum-wage-debate/
- FEE: Truth about minimum wage (youtube): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=siW0YAAfX6I
Minorities, Poverty and Minimum Wage
- http://www.nationalreview.com/article/365999/more-minimum-wage-michael-r-strain
- http://fee.org/freeman/the-eugenics-plot-of-the-minimum-wage/
- http://www.aei-ideas.org/2013/12/raising-minimum-wage-would-be-disastrous-for-minorities-espeically-black-male-teens-whose-jobless-rate-is-now-44-3/
- http://www.wsj.com/articles/thomas-macurdy-the-minimum-wage-stealth-tax-on-the-poor-1424644567
- http://www.aei-ideas.org/2013/12/even-if-an-increase-in-the-minimum-wage-to-10-10-per-hour-doesnt-cost-jobs-itll-still-make-unskilled-workers-worse-off/
- http://economics21.org/commentary/raising-minimum-wage-wont-solve-poverty#.U7yRnlY2L-I
- http://nypost.com/2013/09/17/why-racists-love-the-minimum-wage-laws/
Youth Unemployment and the Minimum Wage
- http://www.forbes.com/sites/timworstall/2014/03/02/youth-unemployment-shows-the-effects-of-a-minimum-wage-that-is-too-high/
- France's young would leave if they could (especially the rich): http://www.cbn.com/tv/3254023064001
- Minimum Wages, Starter Jobs and U.S. Employment: http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702304014504579250253400717102
- The Lost Wages of Youth - How minimum wage kills youth employment: http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052748704761004575096150953378366
- The Minority Youth Unemployment Act: http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424127887323478004578302510280314712
- End of teenage employment: https://fee.org/articles/the-minimum-wage-and-the-end-of-teen-work/
- Businesses stung by $15/hour: http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702304202204579252413945322426
- http://www.aei.org/files/2013/09/16/-gorry-minimum-wages-and-youth-unemployment_161915128123.pdf
- http://www.aei-ideas.org/2013/02/lets-review-the-adverse-effects-of-raising-the-minimum-wage-on-teenagers-when-it-increased-41-between-2007-and-2009/
- http://www.aei.org/article/economics/raising-minimum-wage-is-sure-bet-to-create-more-jobless-young-americans/
- Minimum wage and job growth: http://www.aei-ideas.org/2014/05/the-minimum-wage-and-job-growth/
Seattle Washington
- Minimum wage and job growth: http://www.aei-ideas.org/2014/05/the-minimum-wage-and-job-growth/
- The new ‘restaurant math’ of Seattle’s $15 an hour minimum wage is starting to ‘break the system’: http://www.aei.org/publication/the-new-restaurant-math-of-seattles-15-an-hour-minimum-wage-is-starting-to-break-the-system/
- New evidence suggests that Seattle’s ‘radical experiment’ might be a model for the rest of the nation not to follow: http://www.aei.org/publication/early-evidence-suggests-that-seattles-radical-experiment-might-be-a-model-for-the-rest-of-the-nation-not-to-follow/
- Minimum wage effect? Seattle area restaurant jobs have fallen -900 this year vs. +6,200 food jobs in rest of state: http://www.aei.org/publication/minimum-wage-effect-seattle-area-restaurant-jobs-have-fallen-900-this-year-vs-6200-food-jobs-in-rest-of-state/
- http://thefederalist.com/2016/03/29/70-tries-after-seattle-raised-its-minimum-wage-i-still-cant-find-a-job/#.VwU4pg-pxpE.email
- E21: http://economics21.org/html/minimum-wage-laws-are-barriers-employment-1776.html
California
- The Far-Flung Casualties of California's $15 Minimum: http://economics21.org/commentary/preston-cooper-california-15-minimum-wage-03-29-2016
- Even left-leaning economists say it's a gamble: http://www.vox.com/2016/3/30/11332686/california-minimum-wage-gamble
- L.A. Garment Manufacturing starting their exodus out of state: http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-garment-manufacturing-la-20160416-story.html
- Jerry Brown: Sure it doesn’t make sense economically (meaning it will hurt people), but it’s good politics: https://fee.org/articles/jerry-brown-economically-the-minimum-wage-may-not-make-sense/
- In a proactive response to $15 minimum wage, Berkeley cuts jobs — proving not only does min-wage impact employment, it does so before the law has even taken effect (smart people react to what’s coming): http://hotair.com/archives/2016/04/20/uc-berkeley-greets-15-minimum-wage-with-job-cuts/
- One-size-fits-none: http://www.aei.org/publication/why-californias-one-size-fits-none-15-an-hour-statewide-minimum-wage-is-doomed-to-fail/
- http://www.scpr.org/news/2016/04/25/59957/ahead-of-15-minimum-wage-one-company-leaves-califo/
- Studies that show each $1 hike in the minimum wage brings a 14 percent increase in the likelihood of a 3.5-star restaurant on Yelp! closing: http://www.hbs.edu/faculty/Publication%20Files/MW_Exit_7a89f82f-b2fa-42f2-9a0e-f8a61e95b679.pdf
- Minimum wage increases are great, for people that hate poor people. 60 employers in the bay area (the healthiest part of the state), shut their doors in under a year, and harm to the lower cost areas is even greater. Facts don't matter, if you have feels. And this is just the first phase of a phased in minimum wage increase that will continue to steal opportunities from those who want to work, and those who want to pay them: http://www.fresnobee.com/opinion/opn-columns-blogs/article155979969.html
D.C.
Sanders
Other
- First states to raise minimum wage, ones to see retail job contraction: http://hotair.com/archives/2016/04/09/guess-which-states-lost-retail-jobs-while-hiring-overall-increased/
- New York and White Castle's concerns: http://www.nationalreview.com/article/433893/minimum-wage-new-york-hourly-workers-opportunity-white-castle
Anecdotal evidence
- Minimum wage increase are not the ONLY factor in the decision for Sports Authority to close all 464 of it's stores, but it's named as a key one, “With the minimum wage going up to $15... [that] money has to come from somewhere.”... And now we discover what the real minimum wage is $0/hour (unemployment). Econ101: when the cost of workers exceeds the benefits/returns they provide, the solution is the unemployment line -- now instead of work experience and a salary, they learn what supporting minimum wage means. And amongst the minimum wage supporters, not a fuck was given for the lives harmed in the making of their political utopia: http://www.pasadenastarnews.com/business/20160427/why-sports-authority-is-throwing-in-the-towel-and-closing-all-of-its-stores
Flawed Studies:
- CBO says a slight increase in minimum wage, will only have a slight increase in unemployment. But it will magically raise 1M out of poverty, even though there’s only 25K (1/40th that number) in poverty who are full time minimum wage workers. That math/logic escapes me (for each employed person, it’ll help 39 unemployed ones?).
- Hyper partisan American Progress, wasn’t able to find evidence that minimum wage costs jobs, by citing long discredited studies (where even the authors disagree with them): https://www.americanprogressaction.org/issues/labor/news/2014/02/18/84257/evidence-shows-increasing-the-minimum-wage-is-no-threat-to-employment/
- Katz and Krueger (1992) - The Effect of the Minimum Wage on the Fast-Food Industry:
- https://ideas.repec.org/p/nbr/nberwo/3997.htmlhttp://www.nber.org/papers/w3997.pdf
- Doing a fast food survey (poll) in Texas, they found that during 1990-1991 minimum wage increases, that meal prices increased, but they don’t think it was related to minimum wage increases. And employment increased anyways, though there was salary compression (new workers were paid more, but senior workers got paid less), and they’re not sure if that was related to minimum wage or not. In the end, two surveys and comparing differences in reporting, doesn’t tell us much, since regulations had required compliance, so of course they’re going to change what they say over the phone. It’s not often cited because it’s so bad in methodolody.
- Card and Kruger : Minimum Wages and Employment: A Case Study of the Fast-Food Industry in New Jersey and Pennsylvania
- (1994) http://davidcard.berkeley.edu/papers/min-wage-ff-nj.pdf
- A telephone survey (poll) compared New Jersey and neighboring Pennsylvania (in 1992) after New Jersey raised their minimum wage. Flaws: It looked at a single franchise (Burger King), didn’t look at before/after growth rates, did head count (but not hours worked), didn’t look at total compensation per worker, didn’t try to factor in how many stores were opened/closed or not opened because of the policy, and so on. It just said that burger prices didn’t change and headcount stayed about the same, after a modest increase in minimum wage.
- (1998) - http://davidcard.berkeley.edu/papers/reanal-ff-nj.pdf
- http://davidcard.berkeley.edu/papers/njmin-aer.pdfhttp://www.nber.org/papers/w4509The first paper was criticized, so they revisited the same study, using the same flawed methodology (and blind spots), but they used BLS data instead of a survey (broadened the sample, slightly), to try to cover a moldy donut in powdered sugar. They came to the same conclusions (and ignored the same flaws). In that one area, and time, with a modest increase, compared to a declining economy, they saw a negligible impact.
- Card said in interviews that "It doesn't mean that if we raised the minimum wage to $20 an hour we wouldn't have massive problems… economists who objected to our work were upset by the thought that we were giving free rein to people who wanted to set wages everywhere at any possible level. And that wasn't at all the spirit of what we actually said. In fact, nowhere in the book or in other writing did I ever propose raising the minimum wage”. And,“Realistically, of course, the U.S. is never going to enforce a draconian minimum wage.”
- Krueger defended the study by saying that a small increase in the minimum wage would not affect employment adversely, but of course a large increase would. http://www.pbs.org/newshour/businessdesk/2013/02/the-man-behind-the-minimum-wag.html
- So even the most cited studies by the left, has both authors admitting that large increases in minimum wages are a bad idea.
Refutation of Card and Kruger
- J. Angrist and J. Piscke, Mostly Harmless Econometrics observed that Philadelphia-area fast-food industry was trending downward (relative to New Jersey) before the minimum wage increase. Thus by comparing the two, the continuing downward trend in Philly masked New Jersey’s decline.
- David Neumark and William Wascher examined written records of the number of hours worked in New Jersey and Pennsylvania restaurants and found that the New Jersey minimum wage increase reduced labor demand by 4 percent (a very significant decline)
- Saul Hoffman and Diane Trace examined the employment of low-productivity workers in New Jersey and Pennsylvania when the 1996 federal minimum wage increase eliminated the difference between the two states’ minimum wages. The Hoffman-Trace study examined more evidence over broader areas than Krueger-Card, and over more time and concluded: it reduced the employment of low-productivity workers in Pennsylvania.
Dube, Lester and Reich
- (2010) - Minimum Wage Effects Across State Borders: Estimates Using Contiguous Counties: http://www.irle.berkeley.edu/workingpapers/157-07.pdf
- (2011) - Do Frictions Matter in the Labor Market? Accessions, Separations and Minimum Wage Effects.
- (2013) - Minimum Wage Shocks, Employment Flows and Labor Market Frictions: http://www.irle.berkeley.edu/workingpapers/149-13.pdf
- This paper starts by saying "We find that minimum wages have a sizeable negative effect on employment flows but not on stocks”. In english that means that job mobility stagnated, but head counts remained loosely the same.
- Allegretto, Dube and Reich (2011) - Do Minimum Wages Really Reduce Teen Employment? Accounting for Heterogeneity and Selectivity in State Panel Data
- Basically, the raw data in all these shows that there was a depression of labor in places that raised minimum wages. So they put the data through a complex statistical model that first pairs, “like counties”, and does corrections based on many factors. The post corrected data shows no significant decline (that they can’t attribute to something else). Criticisms are that over-parameterizing (i.e., adding too many controls to) just stifles the true employment-discouraging effects of minimum-wage increases.
Tags: Economics Minimum Wage Meta Fake Studies Inflation