.
Thinking about local living wage requirement
T. J. Bartik,
WE Upjohn
Institute for Employment Research, Working paper, n° 02-76, March, 38 p.,
(2002).
Résumé - Summary
This paper reviews what we currently know about the benefits and costs of
different varieties of a "living wage": a local government requirement, now
adopted by over 50 local governments, for wages above the federal minimum
imposed on employers with some financial link to the local government. The
review includes economic theory, empirical research on local labor markets, and
empirical research on the living wage. The paper concludes that moderate living
wage requirements applied to the local government's own employees, and
contractors' and grantees' employees who are funded by the local government, may
do more good than harm. Excessive living wages or living wages applied to
non-city funded workers are more likely to have negative side-effects. The
merits of living wages applied to economic development assistance depend on the
local economy's strength and whether this assistance program is used by the
city's competitors. In a weak local economy, living wages applied to
commonly-used economic development programs may reduce the city's economic
growth.