Minimum wages in monopsonistic labor markets

Over the last 30 years, researchers have disputed the mixed evidence of the effect of the minimum wage on teenage employment in the United States. Whenever the minimum wage has positive or no effects on employment, they appeal to monopsony models to explain their results. However, very few of these...

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Main Author: Corella Luis F. Munguía
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2020-11-01
Series:IZA Journal of Labor Economics
Subjects:
j01
j08
j42
j48
j38
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/izajole-2020-0007
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spelling doaj-ea7386f92a7545728fa04d56c5da250e2021-09-05T21:02:07ZengSciendoIZA Journal of Labor Economics2193-89972020-11-019120524010.2478/izajole-2020-0007izajole-2020-0007Minimum wages in monopsonistic labor marketsCorella Luis F. Munguía0Comisión Nacional de Salarios Mínimos (National Minimum Wages Comission), Ciudad de México, MexicoOver the last 30 years, researchers have disputed the mixed evidence of the effect of the minimum wage on teenage employment in the United States. Whenever the minimum wage has positive or no effects on employment, they appeal to monopsony models to explain their results. However, very few of these studies have empirically tested whether their results are due to monopsonistic characteristics in the labor markets. In this article, I estimate the effects of the minimum wage for the United States under concentrated labor markets and low-mobility jobs (two variables that measure monopsony), identify heterogeneous effects among different scenarios derived from the monopsony model, and provide a plausible explanation of the mixed results about the minimum wage effects in the literature. My main findings indicate that minimum wages have an elasticity to teenage employment of −0.418 under perfect competition, which is, as expected, much higher than the usual results in the literature. If the monopsony variable is one standard deviation higher than the baseline, it implies a positive change in elasticity of 0.05. The minimum wage has a positive insignificant effect between 0.04 and 0.29 under full monopsonistic labor markets. The results are consistent among different specifications and in controlling for possible external shocks and omitted variables.https://doi.org/10.2478/izajole-2020-0007minimum wagemonopsonylabor policyoligopsonyj01j08j42j48j38
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Corella Luis F. Munguía
spellingShingle Corella Luis F. Munguía
Minimum wages in monopsonistic labor markets
IZA Journal of Labor Economics
minimum wage
monopsony
labor policy
oligopsony
j01
j08
j42
j48
j38
author_facet Corella Luis F. Munguía
author_sort Corella Luis F. Munguía
title Minimum wages in monopsonistic labor markets
title_short Minimum wages in monopsonistic labor markets
title_full Minimum wages in monopsonistic labor markets
title_fullStr Minimum wages in monopsonistic labor markets
title_full_unstemmed Minimum wages in monopsonistic labor markets
title_sort minimum wages in monopsonistic labor markets
publisher Sciendo
series IZA Journal of Labor Economics
issn 2193-8997
publishDate 2020-11-01
description Over the last 30 years, researchers have disputed the mixed evidence of the effect of the minimum wage on teenage employment in the United States. Whenever the minimum wage has positive or no effects on employment, they appeal to monopsony models to explain their results. However, very few of these studies have empirically tested whether their results are due to monopsonistic characteristics in the labor markets. In this article, I estimate the effects of the minimum wage for the United States under concentrated labor markets and low-mobility jobs (two variables that measure monopsony), identify heterogeneous effects among different scenarios derived from the monopsony model, and provide a plausible explanation of the mixed results about the minimum wage effects in the literature. My main findings indicate that minimum wages have an elasticity to teenage employment of −0.418 under perfect competition, which is, as expected, much higher than the usual results in the literature. If the monopsony variable is one standard deviation higher than the baseline, it implies a positive change in elasticity of 0.05. The minimum wage has a positive insignificant effect between 0.04 and 0.29 under full monopsonistic labor markets. The results are consistent among different specifications and in controlling for possible external shocks and omitted variables.
topic minimum wage
monopsony
labor policy
oligopsony
j01
j08
j42
j48
j38
url https://doi.org/10.2478/izajole-2020-0007
work_keys_str_mv AT corellaluisfmunguia minimumwagesinmonopsonisticlabormarkets
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