Title: The Behavioral Effects of Minimum Wages
1The Behavioral Effects of Minimum Wages
- Armin Falk (University of Bonn)
- Ernst Fehr (University of Zurich
- Christian Zehnder (University of Lausanne)
2Why studying Minimum Wages?
- Minimum wage laws are an important labor market
instrument - 25 of 29 OECD countries have some form of minimum
wage legislation - The behavioral effects of minimum wages are still
not fully understood - Anomalously low utilization of opportunities to
pay subminimum wages for certain categories of
workers (Katz and Krueger 1991, 1992)
3- Spillover effect firms often raise wages of
workers who earned less than the new minimum wage
above the level of the new minimum wage (Katz and
Krueger 1992, Card and Krueger 1994) - Contested employment effects of minimum wages
Card (1992), Card Krueger (1994), Machin
Manning (1994) - Important for policy evaluation
- Important for the question whether labor markets
are imperfectly competitive or approximate the
competitive ideal.
4Main Message I
- Minimum wages have a direct impact on workers
perception of what constitutes a fair wage and
thus affect reservation wages - Introducing a MW increases reservation wages
- Therefore, a sizeable share of workers who earned
less than the MW before the introduction is paid
more than the MW after the introduction - Explains the spillover effect
5Main Message II
- The introduction and the removal of MW has
asymmetric effects on reservation wages - Introduction strong rise in reservation wages
- Removal Small decrease in reservation wages
- ? Asymmetric effects on actual wages
- Actual wages strongly increase after introduction
of MW but only weakly decrease after removal of
MW - Explains the low utilization of opportunities to
pay subminimum wages
6Main Message III
- ? Asymmetric effects on employment
- Actual employment increases after introduction
but does not decrease after removal of the MW - Sheds light on the sources of positive employment
effects
7Minimum Wage Reservation Wages
- For some time economists speculated that minimum
wages might affect reservation wages - The minimum wage becomes a focal point,
representing the going, or acceptable wage. ....
workers perceive the minimum as the 'fair wage.
In this way the minimum wage might influence
workers reservation wages. (Card and Krueger
95) - However, reservation wages are difficult to
measure in field data
8Why a laboratory experiment?
- Empirical evidence for zero or positive
employment effects highly contested (e.g. Neumark
and Wascher). - Measurement errors regarding employment and
wages. - Important determinants of employment and wages
are unobservable or very difficult to observe. - marginal revenue product of labor (labor demand)
- workers reservation wages (labor supply)
- wage setting mechanism
- Information conditions unknown in the field
- what do firms and workers know about marginal
revenue product, average product, profits and
reservations wages. - Unknown interactions between MW, labor demand or
supply may occur.
9In a Laboratory Experiment
- no measurement error with regard to wages and
employment - perfect knowledge of marginal revenue product
- precise measurement of reservation wages possible
- control over information conditions.
10Experimental Game
- Market Participants
- 6 Firms
- 18 Workers
- Exogenous Matching
- At the beginning of a period each firm is
randomly matched with three workers - Stage 1 of a period
- Firms can offer the same wage to 0, 1, 2 or 3
workers, w ? 0, 1000 - Stage 2 of a period
- Workers simultaneously accept or reject the offer
they received
11Design continued
- Two Treatments
- Without minimum wage (NO)
- With minimum wage (MW)
- Each treatment lasts 15 periods
- Two Treatment Orders
- Introduction of MW (NO/MW) 5 Sessions
- Elimination of MW (MW/NO) 5 Sessions
12Design continued
13Design continued
- Firms payoff
- Revenue wage ? employed workers
- Workers payoff
- Wage if employed, zero otherwise
- Minimum wage equals 220 lt MRP of third employed
worker - Information conditions
- MRP, payoff functions, number of workers and
firms and the matching technology are common
knowledge - Firms are informed about how many workers
accepted their offer - Workers are informed about firms profits
14Elicitation of reservation wages
- Ask workers for their acceptance thresholds r
before they know the wage offer - If w gt r the offer is accepted, if w lt r it is
rejected - ? Supply Schedule observable
15Matching technology
- If acceptance thresholds are heterogeneous firms
face on average - upwards sloping labor supply
schedules - However, with perfectly random matching the
distribution of reservation wages a firm faces
may not be very representative of the overall
labor supply schedule - May generate a lot of randomness at the firm
level - Needs many periods to converge to whatever the
behavioral equilibrium is in this setting - Solution
- Each firm gets matched with one worker from each
third of the distribution of acceptance thresholds
16Standard Predictions
- Assumptions
- Firms and workers are rational and selfish
- Firms know that workers are selfish
- Implications
- Workers accept every positive wage offer
- Labor supply is horizontal at a wage of one
- Firms offer always the smallest acceptable wage
to all their workers - NO-Treatment w 1
- MW-Treatment w 220 (Minimum Wage)
- There is full employment in both treatments
- The minimum wage does not change employment but
has strong distributive effects
17Predictions with fairness preferences
- Workers have heterogenous acceptance thresholds
- Firms face an upward sloping supply schedule
- Wages are much higher than predicted by the
self-interest model - Minimum wage may increase employment because more
workers accept the wage offer - Example 1
- Reservation wages of 0, 10, 100
- Marginal cost of hiring 3 instead of 2 workers
are 3100 210 280 gt 260 ( MRP of 3rd
worker) - Third worker is not employed without the MW
- With the MW law the third worker will be employed
because the marginal cost of the 3rd worker is
220
18- Example 2
- Reservation wages of 30, 80, 130
- Marginal cost of hiring 3 instead of 2 workers
are3130 280 230 lt 260 - Third worker is employed without the MW
- MW law has no employment effect
19The effect of MW on actual wages(increase and
spillover effect)
NO-MW sequence
Why do firms pay non-minimal wages in NO and more
than the minimum in MW?
20The effect of MW on reservation
wages(heterogeneity, fairness, increase)
NO_MW sequence
21Employment effectsWithout MW employment is
inefficiently low?
MW have the chance to raise employment
22- If reservation wages were constant across
conditions average employment per firm should
approximate 3 in the MW treatment - However, the MW increases reservation wages
23Minimum wage leads to a small but significant
increase in employment
24Do firms chose profit maximizing wages?
Employment effect is the result of profit
maximizing firm behavior
25A temporary MW has permanent effects pre- and
post-MW economy exhibit different wages
26Distribution of wages in the pre- and the post-MW
economy
Why are wages in the post-MW economy so high?
27Why do employers not take more advantage of the
elimination of the MW?
- Related to the underutilization of subminimum
wage opportunities in the field - In Katz Krueger 92, 62 of restaurant managers
believed that they could not attract qualified
teenage workers at the subminimum wage - Suggests that employers are labor supply
constrained - But why could they fill their ranks before the
increase in the MW?
28Reservation wages in the pre- and the post-MW
economy
Post-MW median 200
Pre-MW median 150
Given these distributions, was it optimal to pay
higher wages in the post-MW economy?
29Distribution of profit maximizing wages in the No
condition across sequences
30Difference in reservation wages between pre and
post-MW economy is significant
31Removal of MW has no employment effect
32Summary
- Economists focus on how economic policy changes
the incentives for private agents - Economic policies have effects that go far beyond
changing incentives - Results suggest that minimum wages affect the
perception of what constitutes a fair wage - Minimum wage increases reservation wages
- Results suggest that minimum wage creates a kind
of entitlement effect that is not fully
reversible - Explains asymmetric response of reservation wages
33- This effect on reservation wages gives rise to
important wage employment effects - Firms pay on average more than the minimum wage
after the introduction of the MW - Wages in the pre-MW economy are much lower than
in a post-MW economy - Employment rises less after the introduction
compared to a situation with stable reservation
wages - Employment does not fall after the removal of the
MW - Our results lend support to the idea that the
spillover effect and the under utilization of
opportunities to pay subminimum wages in field
data are driven by the impact of minimum wages on
reservation wages