Minimum Wages and the Informality Constraint
Nils Lehr,
Johanna Schauer and
Hugo Tuesta
No 2026/126, IMF Working Papers from International Monetary Fund
Abstract:
How does informality shape the impact of minimum wage policy? We study this question using evidence from Mexico’s 145% real increase in the minimum wage since 2016, together with a general equilibrium model featuring endogenous informality and household heterogeneity. Reduced-form estimates of the implemented increases indicate limited effects on employment and formalization, alongside modest wage gains at the bottom of the formal wage distribution that arguably reflect incomplete enforcement. The calibrated model reproduces these patterns but predicts that, under full enforcement, higher wage floors generate nonlinear effects: the share of firms reallocating toward informality rises sharply, lowering productivity and aggregate welfare. These losses fall disproportionately on low-skill households, who bear the brunt of the reduction in transfers caused by lower tax revenue yet, as predominantly informal workers, gain little directly from the minimum wage. The minimum wage’s effectiveness as a redistributive tool is therefore limited.
Keywords: Minimum wage; informality; labor markets; welfare; IMF working papers; informality Constraint; household heterogeneity; minimum wage policy; endogenous informality; Minimum wages; Wages; Employment; Labor supply; South America; Central America; Caribbean (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 74
Date: 2026-06-19
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:imf:imfwpa:2026/126
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