maxparrish
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Aug 30, 2005
- Messages
- 2,262
- Location
- SF Bay Area
- Basic Beliefs
- Libertarian-Conservative, Agnostic.
Researchers looking for mystery spots where the laws in physics and economics no longer apply, have been disappointed. Yep, the laws of gravity, and supply and demand still work:

http://econweb.ucsd.edu/~mwither/pdfs/Effects of Min Wage on Wages Employment and Earnings.pdf
We estimate the minimum wage’s effects on low-skilled workers’ employment and
income trajectories. Our approach exploits two dimensions of the data we analyze. First,
we compare workers in states that were bound by recent increases in the federal minimum
wage to workers in states that were not. Second, we use 12 months of baseline
data to divide low-skilled workers into a “target” group, whose baseline wage rates were
directly affected, and a “within-state control” group with slightly higher baseline wage
rates. Over three subsequent years, we find that binding minimum wage increases had
significant, negative effects on the employment and income growth of targeted workers.
Lost income reflects contributions from employment declines, increased probabilities of
working without pay (i.e., an “internship” effect), and lost wage growth associated with
reductions in experience accumulation. Methodologically, we show that our approach
identifies targeted workers more precisely than the demographic and industrial proxies
used regularly in the literature. Additionally, because we identify targeted workers on
a population-wide basis, our approach is relatively well suited for extrapolating to estimates
of the minimum wage’s effects on aggregate employment. Over the late 2000s, the
average effective minimum wage rose by 30 percent across the United States. We estimate
that these minimum wage increases reduced the national employment-to-population ratio
by 0.7 percentage point.
http://econweb.ucsd.edu/~mwither/pdfs/Effects of Min Wage on Wages Employment and Earnings.pdf
