.
The impact of differential payroll tax subsidies on
minimum wage employment
F. Kramarz and T. Philippon,
IZA
Discussion papers,
n° 219, November, 38 p.,
(2000).
Résumé - Summary
In this article, we study the
impact of changes of total labor costs on employment of low-wage workers in
France in a period, 1990 to 1998, that saw sudden and large changes in these
costs. We use longitudinal data from the French Labor Force survey (« enquête
emploi ») in order to understand the consequences of real decreases and real
increases of the labor cost. We examine the transition probabilities from
employment to non-employment and from non-employment to employment. In
particular, we compare the transition probabilities of the workers that were
directly affected by the changes (“between” workers) with the transition
probabilities of workers closest in the wage distribution to those directly
affected (“marginal” workers). In all years with an increasing minimum cost, the
“between” group (or the treated using the vocabulary of controlled experiments)
comprises all workers whose costs in year t lie between the old (year
t) and the new (year t+1) minimum. In all years with a decreasing
minimum, the “between” group comprises all workers whose costs in year t+1
lie between the present minimum cost (year t+1) and the old (year
t) minimum cost. The results can be summarized as follows. Comparing years
of increasing minimum cost and decreasing minimum cost, difference-indifference
estimates imply that an increase of 1% of the cost implies roughly an increase
of 1.5% in the probability of transiting from employment to non-employment for
the treated workers, the resulting elasticity being –1.5. Second, results for
the transitions from non-employment to employment are less clear-cut. Tax
subsidies have a small and insignificant impact on entry from non-employment as
well as on transitions within the wage distribution. Finally, we show that the
“marginal” group constitutes a good control group. In addition, there is no
obvious evidence of substitution between the “between” and “marginal” groups of
workers, but there is some evidence of substitution between workers within the
tax subsidy zone, with wages above those of the “marginal”, and workers outside
the subsidy zone.