What Is a Minimum Wage For? Empirical Results and Theories of Justice
Resource type
Author/contributor
- Green, David A. (Author)
Title
What Is a Minimum Wage For? Empirical Results and Theories of Justice
Abstract
I undertake a Rawlsian political economy exercise—namely, one in which economic institutions are judged by how well they match principles in theories of distributive justice. I contend that such an exercise is integrally related to empirical economics because most theories of justice emphasize respect, which, in turn, depends on how wages and employment are actually assigned in an economy. I explore these ideas in relation to the minimum wage. This leads to a different emphasis on what minimum wage–related outcomes need study, and to a claim that minimum wage setting is related to standards of fairness.
Publication
Canadian Public Policy
Volume
40
Issue
4
Pages
293-314
Date
12/2014
Language
English
ISSN
0317-0861, 1911-9917
Short Title
What Is a Minimum Wage For?
Accessed
8/8/18, 7:07 PM
Citation
Green, D. A. (2014). What Is a Minimum Wage For? Empirical Results and Theories of Justice. Canadian Public Policy, 40(4), 293–314. https://doi.org/10.3138/cpp.2014-058
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