Title: Minimum Wage Fixing: Basic Principles and Lessons Learnt
1Minimum Wage FixingBasic Principles and Lessons
Learnt
- Seminar organised by the International Training
Center - Catherine Saget, ILO Integration Department
- Turin, 14 December 2007
2Outline of the Presentation
- Basic principles of minimum wage fixing (102
countries www.ilo.org/travdatabase) (1) - Social and economic effects of the minimum wage
(2) - Issues for discussion (3)
3The majority of countries fix a national minimum
wage, while a substantial minority adopt sectoral
rates 1
4Social partners are consulted in an overwhelming
majority of countries although the degree of
consultation varies 1
Degree of consultation of the social partners
5In some countries, youth under 18 or 21/22 are
entitled to specific minimum wages (75-90 of the
standard rate) 1
Countries with no specific provisions for youth
Bulgaria, Canada (with exceptions), Estonia,
Greece, Hungary, Portugal, Spain
6The legislation usually provides for both social
and economic criteria to be used to adjust the
level of the minimum wage
Criteria used to adjust the minimum wage (in )
7Less than 40 of countries provide for a regular
frequency of adjustment
Frequency of adjustment provided for in the
legislation (in )
8Relatively similar countries fix the minimum wage
at very different levels
Ratio of minimum wage to median wage in selected
OECD countries, 1995-2005.
NB The median wage is defined as follow 50 of
workers receive a wage below the median wage
9ILO Convention 131 on minimum wage fixing 1
- Once established, minimum wages have the force of
law - Most workers should benefit from the protection
of the minimum wage although exceptions are
possible - Social partners should be fully consulted (not
just informed) - Criteria of fixing/adjusting the minimum wage
should include - Criteria related to the needs of workers and
their families - Criteria related to the capacity of firms to pay
- Minimum wages should be adjusted from time to time
10Minimum wage legislation in Ukraine 1
- Set by the Supreme Council on the recommendation
of the Cabinet of Ministers after consultation of
the social partners - Universal coverage
- Six criteria of adjustment
- Annual revision
- Compliance ensured by the Ministry of Labour
11If the minimum wage is fixed at an appropriate
level, effects on employment are small 2
- If the minimum wage is (i) set to protect workers
at the lower end of the wage distribution and
(ii) increases in line with consumer prices and
considering growth, labour productivity, and
wages, employment effects are small/nil - However, the employment of marginal groups of
workers (those with very low-productivity) might
be negatively affected and other measures could
be implemented (on-thejob training combined with
lower minimum wages, subsidized jobs, etc)
12If the minimum wage is fixed at an appropriate
level, effects on employment are small (contd) 2
- Should minimum wage increases be curbed in order
to protect employment? - Textile sector in Slovenia
- Poorly-managed small firms in the United Kingdom
- The minimum wage should not be used (e.g. should
not be lowered) to protect marginal businesses or
declining industries - The issue is not that some workers loose their
jobs because of the minimum wage but whether they
can find another one or not
13The minimum wage may also have an impact on
informal wages under very specific conditions 2
- Informal workers domestic workers, farm workers,
and workers in very small-size firms - The minimum wage can be used as a benchmark by
informal workers and employers if - It is set at a low level with respect to informal
wages (Brazil, Costa Rica) - It is a widely advertised, simple figure (the
Punjab) - There is strong political support from employers
and the government (Namibia, South Africa) - No effect on informal wages if it is set at a
high (and strange) level with multiple rates by
occupations (Indonesia, many Indian states)
14Good quality monitoring of employment effects is
crucial
- Employment effects vary enormously depending on
the method of estimation - For years, it was believed that a 10 rise in the
minimum wage would lower teenage employment by 1
before new estimations came - Impact of a 10 per cent increase in the minimum
wage on adolescent employment (in ), United
States, 1954-79
Source Bernstein and Schmitt (1998)
15The minimum wage may be one element to reduce
poverty 2
- Minimum wage fixing should constitute one
element in a policy designed to overcome poverty
and to ensure the satisfaction of the needs of
all workers and their families. (ILO
Recommendation 135) - The minimum wage benefits low-paid workers, who
do not necessarily live in poor households - However, available evidence shows that it
benefits more workers living in poor households
than workers living in rich households - Minimum wage fixing must be tuned in order to
minimize employment losses and non-compliance
while protecting the income of low-paid workers
16The minimum wage may be one element to reduce
poverty (contd) 2
- Many OECD countries have introduced in-work
benefits in order to boost labour market
participation of people previously receiving a
benefit (Make work pay) - The minimum wage prevents that in-work benefits
lead to low wages (employers could be tempted to
lower wages following the introduction of in-work
benefits)
17Issues for discussion 3
- What information is available on the criteria of
adjustment and is it circulated? - How to ensure that the social partners too have
access to relevant information and make their
proposals on an informed basis? - Does negotiation on the minimum wage act as a
substitute for weak collective bargaining,
resulting in relatively high minimum wage?
18Issues for discussion (contd) 3
- Is non-compliance with minimum wage regulations
an issue? - Is the minimum wage a barrier to employment?
- Does an increase in the minimum wage result in an
increase in other wages and incomes?
19Conclusion
- The minimum wage can be a powerful policy tool to
(i) ensure low-paid workers a minimum income
(ii) prevent exploitation of workers and (iii)
provide a benchmark for individual employers and
workers to negotiate wages - It should be set at a level where it can
reasonably fulfil these objectives - Use of the minimum wage for other purposes such
as substituting the weakness of collective
bargaining, decreasing unemployment, being the
main tool to fighting poverty etc. should be
refrained - One policy tool cannot be used to achieve too
many policy objectives