Masterarbeit, 2008
34 Seiten, Note: 1,0 (A)
1. Introduction
2. The Theory of Minimum Wages
2.1. The Basic Competitive Labor Market Minimum Wage Model
2.2. The Model with Endogenous Effort
2.3. An Efficiency Wage Model
2.4. A Two- Sector Model
2.5. A Two- Sector Model with Searching for Covered- Sector Jobs
2.6. The monopsony Model
2.7. The Oligopsony Model
2.8. “Shock” Effects
2.9. Heterogeneous Workers
2.10. Lagged or Leaded Adjustment
3. The Empirical Evidence on Minimum Wages
3.1. A Short History of Empirical Research on Minimum Wages
3.2. The Minimum Wage Debate: Card, Krueger, Katz versus Neumark and Wascher
A. The Paper by David Card (1992a)
B. The Paper by Katz and Krueger (1992)
C. The Paper by Neumark and Wascher (1992)
3.3. Main Issues Raised about the Three Papers
A. Employment Effects and the School Enrollment Rate
B. The Appropriate Minimum Wage Measure
C. Lagged Minimum Wage Effects
D. The Utilization of Subminimum Wages
4. Minimum Wages in Germany
4.1. Research on Minimum Wages in Germany
4.2. State of Affairs in the German Minimum Wage Debate
5. Conclusion
This paper examines the theoretical framework and empirical evidence concerning the impacts of minimum wages on employment, with a specific analytical focus on the contemporary political debate in Germany. The research aims to assess whether minimum wage imposition leads to disemployment effects or if alternative market structures allow for neutral or positive outcomes, contrasting findings from the U.S. "new minimum wage literature" with the German socio-economic context.
2. The Theory of Minimum Wages
In the following paragraph different theoretical approaches of the effect of a minimum wage on employment including the two most important and popular ones of a labor market under perfect competition and monopsony should be presented.
2.1. The Basic Competitive Labor Market Minimum Wage Model
This basic model focuses on a single competitive labor market where homogenous firms or workers maximize their profit or their utility, respectively. The labor demand and supply functions that arise from this optimizations can be seen in the wage- employment ( number of workers or hours worked) diagram in figure 1.
1. Introduction: Outlines the political motivation for minimum wage debates in Germany, triggered by sector-specific wage impositions and resulting economic controversy.
2. The Theory of Minimum Wages: Presents various economic models, including competitive, efficiency wage, two-sector, and monopsony models, to explain potential employment outcomes.
3. The Empirical Evidence on Minimum Wages: Reviews the evolution of empirical research in the U.S., highlighting the conflicting findings between key researchers like Card, Krueger, and Neumark.
4. Minimum Wages in Germany: Evaluates specific German studies and discusses why the minimum wage may not be an appropriate tool given existing social security structures.
5. Conclusion: Summarizes the ambiguity of empirical results and calls for more objective, rigorous research tailored to the German institutional framework.
Minimum Wage, Employment, Germany, Labor Market, Monopsony, Empirical Evidence, Wage Elasticity, Competitive Model, Policy Debate, Social Security, Labor Demand, Unemployment, Efficiency Wage, Panel Data, Economic Theory
The paper evaluates the theoretical and empirical impacts of minimum wages on employment, contrasting traditional disemployment predictions with newer research that suggests neutral or positive outcomes under different market conditions.
The research covers labor market theory, econometric methodology used in minimum wage studies, and the specific socio-political debate concerning the potential implementation of a federal minimum wage in Germany.
The goal is to determine if existing empirical evidence provides a clear verdict on the employment effects of minimum wages and to critically assess the applicability of these findings to the German labor market.
The work utilizes a literature review and synthesis of secondary empirical data, comparing various econometric models—such as panel data studies and difference-in-difference approaches—used by international scholars.
The main body details theoretical frameworks for labor markets, a historical overview of U.S. empirical research, a critical analysis of the scholarly "back and forth" between key authors, and an assessment of German-specific studies.
Key concepts include minimum wage, employment elasticity, monopsony models, the German social security system, and labor market institutional frameworks.
The author describes it as highly ideological and politically heated, noting that it lacks objective empirical depth and is often disconnected from the existing protective functions of the German social security system.
The author argues that combined wages allow workers to be paid according to their marginal product while the government fills the gap to subsistence levels, thus preventing potential unemployment associated with a mandated minimum wage.
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