What Do We Really Know About the Employment Effects of the Uk's National Minimum Wage?

36 Pages Posted: 10 Jun 2019

See all articles by Mike Brewer

Mike Brewer

Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS)

Thomas F. Crossley

European University Institute - Economics Department (ECO); Institute for Fiscal Studies

Federico Zilio

University of Melbourne

Date Written: May 2019

Abstract

A substantial body of research on the UK's National Minimum Wage (NMW) has concluded that the the NMW has not had a detrimental effect on employment. This research has directly influenced, through the Low Pay Commission, the conduct of policy, including the subsequent introduction of the National Living Wage (NLW). We revisit this literature and offer a reassessment, motivated by two concerns. First, much of this literature employs difference-in-difference designs, even though there are significant challenges in conducting appropriate inference in such designs, and they can have very low power when inference is conducted appropriately. Second, the literature has focused on the binary outcome of statistical rejection of the null hypothesis, without attention to the range of (positive or negative) impacts on employment that are consistent with the data. In our re-analysis of the data, we conduct inference using recent suggestions for best practice and consider what magnitude of employment effects the data can and cannot rule out. We find that the data are consistent with both large negative and small positive impacts of the UK National Minimum Wage on employment. We conclude that the existing data, combined with difference-in-difference designs, in fact offered very little guidance to policy makers.

Keywords: power, difference-in-difference, minimum wage, minimum detectable effects

JEL Classification: C12, C18, J23, J38

Suggested Citation

Brewer, Mike and Crossley, Thomas F. and Zilio, Federico, What Do We Really Know About the Employment Effects of the Uk's National Minimum Wage? (May 2019). IZA Discussion Paper No. 12369, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3401137 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3401137

Mike Brewer (Contact Author)

Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) ( email )

7 Ridgmount Street
London, WC1E 7AE
United Kingdom

Thomas F. Crossley

European University Institute - Economics Department (ECO) ( email )

Villa San Paolo
Via della Piazzuola 43
50133 Florence
Italy

Institute for Fiscal Studies ( email )

7 Ridgmount Street
London, WC1E 7AE
United Kingdom

Federico Zilio

University of Melbourne

185 Pelham Street
Carlton, Victoria 3053
Australia

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