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Minimum wage systems and earnings inequalities: does institutional diversity matter?

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Garnero, Andrea ; Kampelmann, Stephan ; Rycx, François

Institute of Labor Economics, Bonn

IZA - Bonn

2014

32 p.

collective bargaining ; minimum wage ; wage differential

EU countries

Discussion Paper

8

Wages and wage payment systems

http://www.iza.org/

English

Bibliogr.

"This paper explores how the diversity of minimum wage systems affects earnings inequalities within European countries. It relies on the combination of (a) harmonized micro-data from household surveys, (b) data on national statutory minimum wages and coverage rates, and (c) hand-collected information on minimum rates from more than 1,100 sectoral-level agreements across Europe. The analysis covers 18 countries over the period 2007-2009. Empirical results confirm the intuition of many practitioners that the combination of sectoral minimum rates and high coverage of collective bargaining can, at least for earnings inequalities, be regarded as a functional equivalent to a binding statutory minimum wage at the national level. Regression results suggest indeed that both a national statutory minimum wage and, in countries with sectoral-level minima, a higher collective bargaining coverage are significantly associated with lower levels of (overall and inter-industry) wage inequalities and a smaller fraction of workers paid below prevailing minima. Several robustness checks confirm these findings."

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