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The impact of minimum wages on wages,work and poverty in Nicaragua
Authors:Enrique Alaniz  TH Gindling  Katherine Terrell
Institution:1. Center for Healthcare Policy and Research, University of California Davis School of Medicine, Sacramento, CA, USA;2. Department of Public Health Sciences, University of California Davis School of Medicine, Davis, CA, USA;3. Center for Poverty Research, University of California, Davis, USA;4. Department of Biology, University of Nevada, Reno, USA;5. Department of Economics, Old Dominion University, Norfolk, VA, USA;1. The University of Tokyo, Graduate School of Economics, Hongo 7-3-1, Tokyo 113-0033, Japan;1. Department of Economics, Moore School of Business, University of South Carolina, United States;2. Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics, College of Agriculture and Natural Resources, and Department of Economics, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, University of Connecticut, United States
Abstract:In this paper we use an individual- and household-level panel data set to study the impact of changes in legal minimum wages on a host of labor market outcomes including: a) wages and employment, b) transitions of workers across jobs (in the covered and uncovered sectors) and employment status (unemployment and out of the labor force), and c) transitions into and out of poverty. We find that changes in the legal minimum wage affect only those workers whose initial wage (before the change in minimum wages) is close to the minimum. For example, increases in the legal minimum wage lead to significant increases in the wages and decreases in employment of private covered sector workers who have wages within 20% of the minimum wage before the change, but have no significant impact on wages in other parts of the distribution. The estimates from the employment transition equations suggest that the decrease in covered private sector employment is due to a combination of layoffs and reductions in hiring. Most workers who lose their jobs in the covered private sector as a result of higher legal minimum wages leave the labor force or go into unpaid family work; a smaller proportion find work in the public sector. We find no evidence that these workers become unemployed.Our analysis of the relationship between the minimum wage and household income finds: a) increases in legal minimum wages increase the probability that a poor worker's family will move out of poverty, and b) increases in legal minimum wages are more likely to reduce the incidence of poverty and improve the transition from poor to non-poor if they impact the head of the household rather than the non-head; this is because the head of the household is less likely than a non-head to lose his/her covered sector employment due to a minimum wage increase and because those heads that do lose covered sector employment are more likely to go to another paying job than are non-heads (who are more likely to go into unpaid family work or leave the labor force).
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