Abstract

The ongoing debates on the impact of minimum wage have largely focused on the policy's employment effect for its theoretical implications, but the real question at stake here is its income effect, that is, whether or not it can increase the income of the underclass. Previous efforts have mostly relied on various forms of market imperfection to verify the theoretical integrity of this policy, whereas in this article we have raised another Marxian perspective, emphasizing the positive check of minimum wage on overtime work. Classical economists have long recognized the vulnerability of the working class when faced against capitalists, but only Marx has paid special attention to the complicated interaction between hourly/unit wage rates and the length of the working day, proposing that low wage rates would not only hurt workers by forcing them to work overtime, but that it would also hurt the capitalists as a class once large-scale labor degradation kicks in, endangering the very existence of a well-functioning working class for them to employ. Both the inherent conflict of interests between individual capitalists and capitalists as a class and workers' systematic disadvantage against capital serve to call for the intervention of a “visible hand” which is the establishment of a minimum wage. A theoretical model has been proposed to formalize this wage-hour mechanism for the underclass, emphasizing the special constraints they face when making labor supply decisions. We have discussed three different types of income effect, explaining how workers' income might increase with minimum wage and how firms might also benefit from such a process.

Highlights

  • Since the first law on minimum wage was enacted in New Zealand, 1894, more than one hundred countries have followed up and adopted this labor market regulation, including almost all the developed economies and a majority of the developing economies (Ghosheh 2013)

  • There has been a heated and prolonged debate on the employment effect of the minimum wage policy among economists, but it is proposed in this article that what is of more significance is the income effect

  • Previous research suggests that theoretical models based on different assumptions can generate vastly different predictions about how the income of the underclass would change as the minimum wage rate increases

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Summary

Introduction

Since the first law on minimum wage was enacted in New Zealand, 1894, more than one hundred countries have followed up and adopted this labor market regulation, including almost all the developed economies (except for Singapore) and a majority of the developing economies (Ghosheh 2013). The low hourly wage rate has made overtime work a rigid demand of unskilled workers, giving rise to a new form of control mechanism available to factory managers (Ngai and Chan 2012). These specialties of the Chinese labor market suggest that the major impact of the minimum wage policy is on the length of the working day, not the unemployment rate.

The Income Effect of Minimum Wage
The Minimum Wage Policy
The Income Effect of Minimum Wage: A Marxian Model
The Basic Framework
The Appropriate Data Source
Three Commonly Used Household Surveys
Geographical Coverage
Collecting and Processing Data
The Estimated Income Elasticity With Respect To Minimum Wage
The Income Effect of Minimum Wage and Overtime Work
Robustness Check
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
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