Minimum Wage Responses from Permanent vs. Temporary Minimum Wage Jobs

Oxford University Press
2014

We estimate the effect of minimum wages on employment using the Master Files of the Canadian Labour Force Survey over the recent period 1997–2008. Particular attention is paid to the differences between permanent and temporary minimum wage workers—an important distinction not made in the existing literature. Our estimates for permanent and temporary minimum wage workers combined are at the lower end of estimates based on Canadian studies estimated over earlier time periods, suggesting that the adverse employment effects are declining over time for reasons discussed. Importantly, the adverse employment effects are substantially larger for permanent compared to temporary minimum wage workers; in fact they fall almost exclusively on permanent minimum wage workers.

Authors

  • Mike Campolieti
  • Morley Gunderson
  • Byron Lee

Publication Type

Journal Name

Contemporary Economic Policy

Volume Number

32

Issue Number

3