.
Job protection, minimum
wage and unemployment
P. Cahuc and A. Zylberberg,
IZA, Bonn,
Discussion paper, n° 95, December, 35 p., (1999).
Résumé - Summary
We analyze how wage setting institutions and job-security
provisions interact on unemployment. The assumption that wages are renegotiated
by mutual agreement only is introduced in a matching model with endogenous job
destruction ' Mortensen and Pissarides (1994) in order to get wage profiles with
proper microfoundations. Then, it is shown that job protection policies
influence the wage distribution and that government mandated severance transfers
from employers to workers are not any more neutral, as in the standard matching
model where wages are continuously renegotiated: In our framework high
redundancy transfers influence employment. Moreover, the assumption of
renegotiation by mutual agreement allows us to introduce a minimum wage in a
coherent way, and to study its interactions with job protection policies. Our
computational exercises suggest that redundancy transfers and administrative
dismissal restrictions have negligeable unemployment effects when wages are
flexible or when the minimum wage is low, but a dramatic positive impact on
unemployment when there is a high minimum wage.