Originally posted by Kidicious
1 to 3%?! What's the margin of error?
1 to 3%?! What's the margin of error?
Lets take the midpoint (that a 10 percent increase in the minimum wage reduces the employment of low-skilled labor by 2 percent), with an implied elasticity of 2/10 = 0.2. Apply that to the situation in Mr Mitchel's post where the minimum wage increased from $5.15 to $6.25 in Arkansas and you get a [(6.25-5.15)/5.15]x0.2 = about 4 percentage point increase in unemployment of unskilled labor. Apply that to the situation in Ogie's post where the minimum wage increased from $5.15 to $7.00 in Minnesota and you get a [(7.00-5.15)/5.15]x0.2 = about 7 percentage point increase in unemployment of unskilled labor.
Some people might argue that they are willing to accept that cost in order to make some low wage workers better off. Or you might argue, as LOTM does, that better policies such as the negative income tax are politically infeasible (I am not so sure). But to claim that the cost simply does not exist is contrary to the evidence.
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