JOURNAL ARTICLE

Minimum Wages, Efficiency, and Welfare.

  • Published In: Econometrica, 2025, v. 93, n. 1. P. 265 1 of 3

  • Database: Business Source Ultimate 2 of 3

  • Authored By: Berger, David; Herkenhoff, Kyle; Mongey, Simon 3 of 3

Abstract

Many argue that minimum wages can prevent efficiency losses from monopsony power. We assess this argument in a general equilibrium model of oligopsonistic labor markets with heterogeneous workers and firms. We decompose welfare gains into an efficiency component that captures reductions in monopsony power and a redistributive component that captures the way minimum wages shift resources across people. The minimum wage that maximizes the efficiency component of welfare lies below $8.00 and yields gains worth less than 0.2% of lifetime consumption. When we add back in Utilitarian redistributive motives, the optimal minimum wage is $11 and redistribution accounts for 102.5% of the resulting welfare gains, implying offsetting efficiency losses of −2.5%. The reason a minimum wage struggles to deliver efficiency gains is that with realistic firm productivity dispersion, a minimum wage that eliminates monopsony power at one firm causes severe rationing at another. These results hold under an EITC and progressive labor income taxes calibrated to the U.S. economy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Additional Information

  • Source:Econometrica. 2025/01, Vol. 93, Issue 1, p265
  • Document Type:Article
  • Subject Area:History
  • Publication Date:2025
  • ISSN:0012-9682
  • DOI:10.3982/ECTA21466
  • Accession Number:183952587
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