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The Impact of Minimum Wages on Labour Market Transitions

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
The Impact of Minimum Wages on Labour Market Transitions
Abstract
We investigate differences in labour market transition rates between high and low minimum wage regimes using Canadian data spanning 1979–2008. We find that higher minimum wages result in lower hiring rates but also lower job separation rates. Importantly, the reduced separation rates are due mainly to reductions in layoffs, occur in the first six months of a job and are present for unskilled workers of all ages. Thus, jobs in higher minimum wage regimes are more stable but harder to get. For older workers, these effects are almost exactly offsetting, resulting in little impact on the employment rate.
Publication
The Economic Journal
Volume
123
Issue
573
Pages
1203-1235
Date
12/2013
Language
English
ISSN
00130133
Accessed
8/8/18, 7:01 PM
Citation
Brochu, P., & Green, D. A. (2013). The Impact of Minimum Wages on Labour Market Transitions. The Economic Journal, 123(573), 1203–1235. https://doi.org/10.1111/ecoj.12032