.
Minimum wages and youth employment in France and the
United States
J. M. Abowd and alii,
TEAM, Paris, janvier, 31 p.,
(2005).
Résumé - Summary
We
use longitudinal individual wage and employment data in France and the United
States to investigate the effect of changes in the real minimum wage rate on an
individual’s employment status. We focus on workers employed at wages close
enough to the minimum in a reference year as to be illegal in an adjacent
comparison year as a result of movements in the real minimum wage. We find that
movements in the American real minimum wage are associated with no employment
effects, whereas movements in the cost of French minimum wage workers are
associated with very strong negative employment effects. Our analysis is based
upon identifying the direct effect of the change in the real minimum wage rate
on exits from (entry into) employment when the real minimum wage rate increases
(respectively, decreases) and identifying the heterogeneity in the behavior of
our treatment and control groups using a pseudo experimental contrast. We relate
the difference-in-difference estimator directly to demand and supply
elasticities for the two groups.