Difference between revisions of "Minimum Wage"

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(Created page with " ==The Card-Kreuger Study== *[https://www.nber.org/papers/w5224 "The Effect of New Jersey's Minimum Wage Increase on Fast-Food Employment: A Re-Evaluation Using Payroll Reco...")
 
(The Card-Kreuger Study)
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     ] David Card, Lawrence F. Katz and Alan B. Krueger
 
     ] David Card, Lawrence F. Katz and Alan B. Krueger
 
ILR Review
 
ILR Review
Vol. 47, No. 3 (Apr., 1994), pp. 487-497
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Vol. 47, No. 3 (Apr., 1994), pp. 487-497.
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*[https://www.nber.org/papers/w4570 "Subminimum Wages: Reply to Card, Katz and Krueger,] David Neumark & William Wascher.
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*[https://religiopoliticaltalk.com/neumarkwascher-bitch-slap-cardkrueger/ ]
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{{Quotation| The Card-Krueger data were elicited from a survey that asked managers or assistant managers “How many full-time and part-time workers are employed in your res­taurant, excluding managers and assistant managers?” This question is highly ambiguous, as it could refer to the current shift, the day, or per­haps the payroll period, and the respondents’ interpretation of it could differ in the observations covering the periods before and after the minimum wage increase. In contrast, the payroll data referred unam­biguously to the payroll period used by the restaurant. Reflecting this difference, the data collected by Card and Krueger had much greater variability across the two observations than did the payroll data, with changes that were sometimes implausible...
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In contrast both to their original study and to our replication, their reanalysis generally finds small and statistically insignificant effects of the increase in New Jersey’s mini­mum wage on employment, and they conclude that “the increase in New Jersey’s minimum wage probably had no effect on total employ­ment in New Jersey’s fast-food industry, and possibly had a small pos­itive effect”. }}

Revision as of 07:41, 13 October 2021

The Card-Kreuger Study

   ] David Card, Lawrence F. Katz and Alan B. Krueger

ILR Review Vol. 47, No. 3 (Apr., 1994), pp. 487-497.

The Card-Krueger data were elicited from a survey that asked managers or assistant managers “How many full-time and part-time workers are employed in your res­taurant, excluding managers and assistant managers?” This question is highly ambiguous, as it could refer to the current shift, the day, or per­haps the payroll period, and the respondents’ interpretation of it could differ in the observations covering the periods before and after the minimum wage increase. In contrast, the payroll data referred unam­biguously to the payroll period used by the restaurant. Reflecting this difference, the data collected by Card and Krueger had much greater variability across the two observations than did the payroll data, with changes that were sometimes implausible...

.
In contrast both to their original study and to our replication, their reanalysis generally finds small and statistically insignificant effects of the increase in New Jersey’s mini­mum wage on employment, and they conclude that “the increase in New Jersey’s minimum wage probably had no effect on total employ­ment in New Jersey’s fast-food industry, and possibly had a small pos­itive effect”.