The short-term impact of the minimum wage on employment: evidence from Spain
Authors
Fernández-Baldor Laporta, PabloDirector
Jimeno Serrano, Juan FranciscoDate
2022Affiliation
Universidad de AlcaláBibliographic citation
Fernández-Baldor Laporta, Pablo. The short-term impact of the minimum wage on employment : evidence from Spain. Trabajo Fin de Máster. Universidad de Alcalá, 2022.
Keywords
Minimum Wage
Employment
Job Loss
Propensity Score Matching
Difference-in-Differences
Document type
info:eu-repo/semantics/masterThesis
Version
info:eu-repo/semantics/acceptedVersion
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internacional
Access rights
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
Abstract
Minimum wages have been widely discussed in the literature. The minimum
wage impact on employment strongly depends on labor market concentration
and the point at which it is located in the income distribution. Therefore, its
study essentially involves exploring whether it has been set too far, beyond the
competitive market wage. In 2019, the Spanish government decided to raise the
minimum wage by 22.3%. This increase is of a previously unseen magnitude.
Using rich administrative data, we combine Propensity Score Matching and a
Di erence-in-Di erences model to evaluate the short-run employment e ect of
this policy. We nd that the reform increased the probability of job loss within a
range of 0.38 pp. (7.8%) and 0.44 pp. (9.2%) for workers below the new minimum
wage, which implies an employment elasticity between 0.3 and 0.4. In addition,
our results suggest that the bulk of this e ect is concentrated in the group of
workers furthest from the new minimum wage. This is the segment of the income
distribution that bore the bulk of the employment costs of the minimum wage
increase.
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Files | Size | Format |
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TFM_Fernandez-Baldor_Laporta_2 ... | 2.262Mb |
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