Minimum Wages: Curse or Blessing

RESEARCH IN LABOR ECONOMICS, Vol. 16

Posted: 6 Dec 1996

See all articles by Morten O. Ravn

Morten O. Ravn

European University Institute - Economics Department (ECO); London Business School - Department of Economics; University of Southampton; Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR); National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER)

Jan Rose Sorensen

Aarhus University - Department of Economics and Business Economics

Abstract

In this paper we consider a new channel through which a minimum wage legislation can affect the economy. We look at an overlapping generations economy in which skills are endogenously determined. Skills, or human capital, is determined by the average skill level of the previous generation and by the amount of effort that agents put into schooling. Because of the intergenerational externality, the competitive equilibrium is sub-optimal and is characterized by agents undertaking too little schooling. We show that when all agents are identical, a minimum wage legislation can attain the first-best solution, and this may be thought of as an elimination of low-productivity jobs. This is not possible when agents differ. We model cross-agent heterogeneities through the effectiveness with which agents can accumulate human capital through schooling. In this case we show that a binding minimum wage may produce unemployment and may increase or decrease the aggregate human capital level.

JEL Classification: D90, E24, I29

Suggested Citation

Ravn, Morten O. and Sorensen, Jan Rose, Minimum Wages: Curse or Blessing. RESEARCH IN LABOR ECONOMICS, Vol. 16, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3572

Morten O. Ravn (Contact Author)

European University Institute - Economics Department (ECO) ( email )

Villa San Paolo
Via della Piazzuola 43
50133 Florence
Italy

London Business School - Department of Economics ( email )

Sussex Place
Regent's Park
London NW1 4SA
United Kingdom
+44 20 7262 5050 ext. 3717 (Phone)
+44 20 7402 0718 (Fax)

University of Southampton ( email )

University Rd.
Southampton SO17 1BJ, Hampshire SO17 1LP
United Kingdom
+44 1703 593996 (Phone)
+44 1703 593858 (Fax)

Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR)

London
United Kingdom

National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER)

1050 Massachusetts Avenue
Cambridge, MA 02138
United States

Jan Rose Sorensen

Aarhus University - Department of Economics and Business Economics ( email )

Fuglesangs Allé 4
Aarhus V
Denmark
+45 8942 1611 (Phone)

Do you have negative results from your research you’d like to share?

Paper statistics

Abstract Views
1,124
PlumX Metrics