The Minimum Wage and the Great Recession: Evidence from the Current Population Survey

Jeffrey Clemens
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引用次数: 19

Abstract

I analyze recent federal minimum wage increases using the Current Population Survey. The relevant minimum wage increases were differentially binding across states, generating natural comparison groups. I first estimate a standard difference-in-differences model on samples restricted to relatively low-skilled individuals, as described by their ages and education levels. I also employ a triple-difference framework that utilizes continuous variation in the minimum wage's bite across skill groups. In both frameworks, estimates are robust to adopting a range of alternative strategies, including matching on the size of states' housing declines, to account for variation in the Great Recession's severity across states. My baseline estimate is that this period's full set of minimum wage increases reduced employment among individuals ages 16 to 30 with less than a high school education by 5.6 percentage points. This estimate accounts for 43 percent of the sustained, 13 percentage point decline in this skill group's employment rate and a 0.49 percentage point decline in employment across the full population ages 16 to 64.
最低工资与大衰退:来自当前人口调查的证据
我使用当前人口调查来分析最近联邦最低工资的增长。相关的最低工资增长在各州具有不同的约束力,产生了自然的比较组。我首先估计了一个标准的差异中的差异模型,该模型仅限于相对低技能的个体,根据他们的年龄和教育水平进行描述。我还采用了一个三重差异框架,利用最低工资在不同技能群体中的持续变化。在这两个框架中,对于采用一系列替代策略,包括匹配各州房价下跌的规模,以解释大衰退在各州的严重程度的差异,估算结果都是稳健的。我的基本估计是,这一时期全面提高最低工资使16岁至30岁、高中以下学历的人的就业率下降了5.6个百分点。这一估计占这一技能群体就业率持续下降13个百分点的43%,占16至64岁总人口就业率下降0.49个百分点的43%。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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