Fighting 'Low Equilibria' by Doubling the Minimum Wage? Hungary's Experiment

44 Pages Posted: 17 Jan 2004

See all articles by Gábor Kertesi

Gábor Kertesi

Budapest University of Economic Sciences and Public Administration - Department of Microeconomics

Janos Kollo

Hungarian Academy of Sciences (HAS) - Research Centre for Economic and Regional Studies (HAS); IZA Institute of Labor Economics

Date Written: December 2003

Abstract

In January 2001 the Hungarian government increased the minimum wage from Ft 25,500 to Ft 40,000. One year later the wage floor rose further to Ft 50,000. The paper looks at the short-run impact of the first hike on small-firm employment and flows between employment and unemployment. It finds that the hike significantly increased labor costs and reduced employment in the small firm sector; and adversely affected the job retention and job finding probabilities of low-wage workers. While the conditions for a positive employment effect were mostly met in depressed regions spatial inequalities were amplified rather than reduced.

Keywords: minimum wages, transition, regional labor markets

JEL Classification: J38, P23, R23

Suggested Citation

Kertesi, Gábor and Köllõ, János, Fighting 'Low Equilibria' by Doubling the Minimum Wage? Hungary's Experiment (December 2003). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=487406 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.487406

Gábor Kertesi

Budapest University of Economic Sciences and Public Administration - Department of Microeconomics ( email )

H-1093 Budapest
Hungary
(36-1)216-7218 (Phone)
(36-1)216-7218 (Fax)

János Köllõ (Contact Author)

Hungarian Academy of Sciences (HAS) - Research Centre for Economic and Regional Studies (HAS) ( email )

Labour Research Department
Budapest H-1112
Hungary
(36-1)309-2654 (Phone)
(36-1)319-3151 (Fax)

IZA Institute of Labor Economics

P.O. Box 7240
Bonn, D-53072
Germany

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