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International Welfare and Employment Linkages Arising from Minimum Wages

Hartmut Egger (), Peter H. Egger () and James R. Markusen ()

No 15196, NBER Working Papers from National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc

Abstract: We formulate a two-country model with monopolistic competition and heterogeneous firms to reconsider labor market linkages in open economies. Labor-market imperfections arise by virtue of country-specific real minimum wages. Two principal experiments are considered. First, we show that trade liberalization under minimum wages differs significantly from trade liberalization under standard assumptions. In the former case, there is effectively a perfectly elastic supply of labor to production whereas in the conventional case it is assumed that aggregate labor supply is perfectly inelastic. Standard effects on marginal and average firm productivity are reversed in our model, yet there are significant gains from trade arising from employment expansion, an effect quite different from the source of gains from trade in the conventional approach. Second, we show that with firm heterogeneity an increase in one country's minimum wage triggers firm exit in both countries and thus harms workers at home and abroad. In an extension to our baseline model, we illustrate that offshoring production from the high-wage to the low-wage country within multinational firms lowers the scope for exporting the costs of a higher minimum wage to the trading partner.

JEL-codes: F12 F15 F16 F23 J30 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-int, nep-lab and nep-mic
Date: Written
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