Heterogeneous effects of minimum wage on labor market outcomes: A case study from Turkey

We assess the effects of a sharp minimum wage increase on wages, informality, and employment in Turkey, a large developing economy with one of the highest minimum wage-to-average wage ratios among OECD countries and widespread discrepancies between labor market outcomes of women and of men. We look...

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Main Authors: Işık Enes, Orhangazi Özgür, Tekgüç Hasan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2020-11-01
Series:IZA Journal of Labor Policy
Subjects:
j08
j21
j23
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/izajolp-2020-0016
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spelling doaj-e899d2f13302440a84e32b095a2697392021-09-05T21:02:07ZengSciendoIZA Journal of Labor Policy2193-90042020-11-0110120524010.2478/izajolp-2020-0016izajolp-2020-0016Heterogeneous effects of minimum wage on labor market outcomes: A case study from TurkeyIşık Enes0Orhangazi Özgür1Tekgüç Hasan2Department of Economics, Kadir Has University, Cibali34083Istanbul, TurkeyDepartment of Economics, Kadir Has University, Cibali34083Istanbul, TurkeyDepartment of Economics, Kadir Has University, Cibali34083Istanbul, TurkeyWe assess the effects of a sharp minimum wage increase on wages, informality, and employment in Turkey, a large developing economy with one of the highest minimum wage-to-average wage ratios among OECD countries and widespread discrepancies between labor market outcomes of women and of men. We look at the quasi-experimental 2016 minimum wage increase and pay attention to identifying information coming from demographic groups. We find that the increase in the minimum wage had an economically substantial and statistically significant positive impact on wages. Despite the positive wage effects of the increase, we find no negative employment effects. However, we show that the minimum wage increase may have caused an increase in the share of informal employment among workers with less than tertiary education, especially for such workers working for small firms.https://doi.org/10.2478/izajolp-2020-0016minimum wageemploymentinformalityincremental difference-indifferencesj08j21j23
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Işık Enes
Orhangazi Özgür
Tekgüç Hasan
spellingShingle Işık Enes
Orhangazi Özgür
Tekgüç Hasan
Heterogeneous effects of minimum wage on labor market outcomes: A case study from Turkey
IZA Journal of Labor Policy
minimum wage
employment
informality
incremental difference-indifferences
j08
j21
j23
author_facet Işık Enes
Orhangazi Özgür
Tekgüç Hasan
author_sort Işık Enes
title Heterogeneous effects of minimum wage on labor market outcomes: A case study from Turkey
title_short Heterogeneous effects of minimum wage on labor market outcomes: A case study from Turkey
title_full Heterogeneous effects of minimum wage on labor market outcomes: A case study from Turkey
title_fullStr Heterogeneous effects of minimum wage on labor market outcomes: A case study from Turkey
title_full_unstemmed Heterogeneous effects of minimum wage on labor market outcomes: A case study from Turkey
title_sort heterogeneous effects of minimum wage on labor market outcomes: a case study from turkey
publisher Sciendo
series IZA Journal of Labor Policy
issn 2193-9004
publishDate 2020-11-01
description We assess the effects of a sharp minimum wage increase on wages, informality, and employment in Turkey, a large developing economy with one of the highest minimum wage-to-average wage ratios among OECD countries and widespread discrepancies between labor market outcomes of women and of men. We look at the quasi-experimental 2016 minimum wage increase and pay attention to identifying information coming from demographic groups. We find that the increase in the minimum wage had an economically substantial and statistically significant positive impact on wages. Despite the positive wage effects of the increase, we find no negative employment effects. However, we show that the minimum wage increase may have caused an increase in the share of informal employment among workers with less than tertiary education, especially for such workers working for small firms.
topic minimum wage
employment
informality
incremental difference-indifferences
j08
j21
j23
url https://doi.org/10.2478/izajolp-2020-0016
work_keys_str_mv AT isıkenes heterogeneouseffectsofminimumwageonlabormarketoutcomesacasestudyfromturkey
AT orhangaziozgur heterogeneouseffectsofminimumwageonlabormarketoutcomesacasestudyfromturkey
AT tekguchasan heterogeneouseffectsofminimumwageonlabormarketoutcomesacasestudyfromturkey
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