Thursday, 31 May 2018

Minimum wages and fringe benefits

I'd suggested a couple of weeks ago that minimum wage hikes can be at the expense of other non-monetary benefits provided to workers.

Tyler Cowen points to some empirics on it from Jeffrey Clemens, Lisa B Kahn and Jonathan Meer ($):
This paper explores the relationship between the minimum wage, the structure of employee compensation, and worker welfare. We advance a conceptual framework that describes the conditions under which a minimum wage increase will alter the provision of fringe benefits, alter employment outcomes, and either increase or decrease worker welfare. Using American Community Survey data from 2011-2016, we find robust evidence that state-level minimum wage changes decreased the likelihood that individuals report having employer-sponsored health insurance. Effects are largest among workers in very low-paying occupations, for whom coverage declines offset 9 percent of the wage gains associated with minimum wage hikes. We find evidence that both insurance coverage and wage effects exhibit spillovers into occupations moderately higher up the wage distribution. For these groups, reductions in coverage offset a more substantial share of the wage gains we estimate.

No comments:

Post a Comment