The Asymmetric Effect of Wage Floors: A Natural Experiment with a Rising and Falling Minimum Wage

28 Pages Posted: 26 Dec 2023 Last revised: 7 May 2025

See all articles by Emiliano Huet-Vaughn

Emiliano Huet-Vaughn

Claremont Colleges - Pomona College

Jon Piqueras

University College London

Abstract

Exploiting a unique natural experiment,we showthe asymmetric effects of a large increase and an equivalent subsequent decrease to a binding minimum wage. Wages in a leading low-wage industry increase as the minimumwage rises, but do not fall when it is lowered. This boost for low-wage workers' earnings is apparently permanent five years after the policy is revoked, providing novel evidence of hysteresis in wage setting from temporary labor policy. In the first year post repeal this is consistent with downward nominal wage rigidity. But, the elevated earnings persist even in high inflation times, contrary to the prediction from existing work that real wage reductions under high inflation should erode the nominal wage gap relative to unaffected firms. Our findings thus challenge the conventional view that inflation "greases the wheels" of the labor market in the face of downward nominal wage rigidity, and, demonstrate the value of even transitory labor market policy in achieving permanent gains for workers (play it while you got it).

Keywords: hysteresis, minimum wage, downward nominal wage rigidity

JEL Classification: J3, J8, E24, E31

Suggested Citation

Huet-Vaughn, Emiliano and Piqueras, Jon, The Asymmetric Effect of Wage Floors: A Natural Experiment with a Rising and Falling Minimum Wage. IZA Discussion Paper No. 16684, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4673967

Emiliano Huet-Vaughn (Contact Author)

Claremont Colleges - Pomona College ( email )

Claremont, CA 91711
United States

Jon Piqueras

University College London ( email )

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