|
|
|
|
|
by monocasa
3283 days ago
|
|
> It's of course disingenuous (and insane) to say that raising the minimum wage will not cause deadweight loss. Except that there's good data that this doesn't happen, ie. that minimum wage increases are actually associated with small increases in employment. There's also very good data that subject of minimum wage increases is fraught with rampant publication bias. https://www.ctdol.state.ct.us/lweab/Doucougliagos%20&%20Stan... In the minimum-wage literature, the magnitude of the
publication selection bias is as large or larger, on
average, than the underlying reported estimate. Overall,
correcting for publication bias would transform a
modestly negative average elasticity to a small positive
employment elasticity.
|
|
Economists have a term for this type of good, "Giffen Good"[1]. And for obvious reasons, they almost never exist. When does an increase lead to a demand increase? Why would employers demand more labor with a price floor than they would without one?
[1] http://lexicon.ft.com/Term?term=Giffen-good