The
first articles I’d recommend are not about minimum wages in Australia at all,
but in a lot of respects they crystallise the main debates around the role of
minimum wages. At the AFPC’s Minimum Wage Research Forum in 2008, the two
keynote speakers were Stephen Machin from the UK, and Richard Burkhauser from
the US.
Professor Machin
talked about the UK experience following the introduction of a National Minimum
Wage in 1997, and how the setting of minimum wages had been very much an “evidence-based”
process; that is, by conducting research into the economic effects of minimum
wages in the UK. Professor Machin claimed that (at that time) there had been
little evidence of negative effects of minimum wages on employment and hours,
and that minimum wages can raise the wages and welfare of working families.
By
contrast, Professor Burkhauser claimed that the negative effects of minimum
wages on employment outweigh the movement out of poverty by those workers who
are helped by the policy. Professor Burkhauser argued that instead an Earned
Income Tax Credit is a far more effective way of ensuring those who work are
not poor (an EITC is a tax refund for lower-income households: have a look on
Wikipedia if you’re interested in the details).
Another
interesting article from that Forum was Ian McDonald’s “macroeconomic
perspective” on the setting of minimum wages. He argued that minimum wages in
Australia should be adjusted by 4 per cent a year—2.5 per cent to account for
changes in prices and 1.5 per cent for changes in productivity. Some might find
this view unusual, but it’s worth a read to see how Professor McDonald backs up
his proposal.
Of
the non-Forum papers NATSEM’s report on the interactions between wages and the
tax-transfer system shows what would happen to the incomes of a range of
low-wage households if minimum wages were raised, given that those households
would face higher tax payments and reduced government transfers. It’s a bit out
of date now (it was published in 2006), but it gives some indication of how
much of a minimum wage increase households are really getting in their pockets.
I
found Downes’ and Hanslow’s 2009 report interesting, if only because it’s been
the only research commissioned by either the AFPC or FWA to model the
macroeconomic impacts of increasing minimum wages. Of course all economic
modelling faces limitations, and this is no exception, but it’s worth a look if
you’re interested in models (and who isn’t?)
Also
from that year I was quite interested in Hahn's and Wilkins’ report on the living
standards of low-paid workers. They took a multidimensional approach to
measuring living standards; so a person could be considered to have low living
standards if they have low income and low wealth, or low income and low
consumption, or maybe all of the above. It’s interesting to see how the
incidence of low living standards amongst low-paid workers changes as the
definition of “low living standards” changes.
From
the FWA era, a report I read a number of times was Jocelyn Pech’s report on various
ways of defining and measuring the relative living standards and needs of
low-paid workers. How does one determine how well-off low-paid workers are?
Well, there’s been a number of ways that this has been done by Australian
researchers: this report canvasses their approaches.
And
of course you should read all of my research! OK, maybe not, but an article that
I quite like is the one I did on labour market outcomes for low-skilled people in Australia (it’s the final article in the report). It brought together a number
of ideas that had been circulating around my head about what the data relating
to low-skilled employment can tell us. Also, I’d recommend the report I did
with Tom Bolton on the distribution of earnings for employees earning minimum wages – like Blur’s “Song 2” it seems to have had a lot of legs for something that
was knocked out pretty quickly.
It
would be remiss of me to write about Australian minimum wage research over the
past few years without mentioning Dr Josh Healy’s mammoth work on the wages
safety net of the Australian Industrial Relations Commission from 1993 to 2005.
It takes a look at how minimum wages were decided over this
period, and the implications of those decisions. More recently, Wilkins and Wooden examined minimum wage/award reliance as measured by the HILDA survey.
The inclusion of an “award reliance” variable in the HILDA survey is
potentially an exciting development for minimum wage research in Australia,
because the HILDA survey has a large number of variables that can be
cross-tabbed, and employees are tracked over time.
Of
course, there are many more research reports to explore on the FWA website if
you’re interested. And for those who just come here for the AFL Power Rankings,
they’ll be back on Sunday.
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