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Niedriglohnarbeitsmarkt

Der Ausbau des Niedriglohnsektors sollte Ende der 1990er Jahre die hohe Arbeitslosigkeit reduzieren. Als Niedriglohn gilt ein Arbeitsentgelt, das trotz Vollzeitbeschäftigung keine angemessene Existenzsicherung gewährleistet – die OECD definiert den ihn als einen Bruttolohn, der unterhalb von zwei Dritteln des nationalen Medianbruttolohns aller Vollzeitbeschäftigten liegt. Betroffen von Niedriglöhnen sind überdurchschnittlich häufig Personen ohne beruflichen Abschluss, jüngere Erwerbstätige und Frauen.
Bietet der Niedriglohnsektor eine Chance zum Einstieg in den Arbeitsmarkt oder ist er eine Sackgasse? Das IAB-Themendossier erschließt Informationen zum Forschungsstand.
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  • Literaturhinweis

    Unequal Job Security, Unemployment Scarring, and the Distribution of Welfare in a Search and Bargaining Model (2025)

    Abrahams, Scott ;

    Zitatform

    Abrahams, Scott (2025): Unequal Job Security, Unemployment Scarring, and the Distribution of Welfare in a Search and Bargaining Model. In: Labour, Jg. 39, H. 3, S. 189-205. DOI:10.1111/labr.70001

    Abstract

    "What causes unemployment to concentrate among the same workers over time, and what are the welfare consequences? I demonstrate that unemployment scarring emerges naturally in a frictional labor market when firms with lower-productivity matches have smaller profit margins to absorb negative shocks. I develop a search model with endogenous job termination that reproduces two key empirical regularities: lower-wage jobs are less stable and previous unemployment predicts future job loss. The model captures a crucial non-monotonic pattern I document empirically, where termination risk drops sharply in the left tail of the wage distribution but flattens beyond the median wage. This mechanism increases lifetime wage and unemployment inequality by 7% compared to models with uniform termination risk. Counterfactual experiments reveal that unemployment insurance reduces scarring by enabling workers to wait for higher-quality matches, but simultaneously strengthens workers' bargaining position, which counterintuitively decreases job security at every productivity level." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku, Published by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    New Technology, Older Workers: How Workplace Technology is Associated with Indicators of Job Retention (2025)

    Abrams, Leah ; Harknett, Kristen ; Schneider, Daniel ;

    Zitatform

    Abrams, Leah, Daniel Schneider & Kristen Harknett (2025): New Technology, Older Workers: How Workplace Technology is Associated with Indicators of Job Retention. In: Journal of Aging & Social Policy, S. 1-17. DOI:10.1080/08959420.2025.2523122

    Abstract

    "Middle-aged and older adults who are employed in precarious, high-strain jobs may face challenges to continued work, risking economic insecurity and poor wellbeing in retirement. Technology in the workplace, an under-studied aspect of work environments, could accommodate aging workers or could add stress to their jobs. This study examines how technology in sales and surveillance at work are related to job satisfaction and planned job exits among approximately 6,000 workers aged 50–69 employed in the low-wage service sector (e.g. retail, pharmacy, grocery, hardware, fast food, casual dining, delivery, and hotel). On-the-job surveillance was related to lower job satisfaction and higher reports of looking for a new job, especially when combined with sanctioning for slow speed of work. However, rewards for speed, and to a lesser extent the use of leaderboards, were associated with higher job satisfaction, demonstrating the potential of technology to enhance the work experience for older employees. The use of sales technologies was not associated with job satisfaction or intentions to look for a new job. These results provide a uniquely detailed portrait of prevailing labor market conditions for aging workers in the service sector and demonstrate how certain kinds of technology matter for older workers ’ employment." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Low-wage employment in France: A cross-country perspective (2025)

    Barreto, César; Puymoyen, Agnes; Fluchtmann, Jonas ; Pearsall, Eliza-Jane; Georgieff, Alexandre; Carcillo, Stéphane ; Pacifico, Daniele; Hijzen, Alexander;

    Zitatform

    Barreto, César, Stéphane Carcillo, Jonas Fluchtmann, Alexandre Georgieff, Alexander Hijzen, Daniele Pacifico, Eliza-Jane Pearsall & Agnes Puymoyen (2025): Low-wage employment in France. A cross-country perspective. (OECD social, employment and migration working papers 313), Paris, 47 S. DOI:10.1787/82539f44-en

    Abstract

    "This study investigates factors favoring a possible "smicardization" of French workers - the process of an increasing coverage of workers at the minimum wage. First, the minimum wage is relatively high in France compared with other countries, with the result that a large number of workers are close to it. Second, low wages reflect less the characteristics of firms or sectors than the low skills of workers, the resolution of which requires appropriate education and training policies, effective over the long-term. Finally, an analysis of tax and benefit systems highlights the existence of potential low-wage trap mechanisms, which are particularly significant in France compared to other countries. Nevertheless, analysis of individual trajectories shows that it is no more difficult for low-wage workers to climb the wage ladder in France than in the other selected countries." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Gesetzliche Mindestlöhne, Armutslöhne und Tarifbindung in Europa (2025)

    Becker, Matthias ;

    Zitatform

    Becker, Matthias (2025): Gesetzliche Mindestlöhne, Armutslöhne und Tarifbindung in Europa. In: Soziale Sicherheit, Jg. 74, H. 6, S. 17-19.

    Abstract

    "Die Mindestlohn-Richtlinie der EU aus dem Jahr 2022 zielte darauf ab, eine europaweite Untergrenze bei den Arbeitseinkommen einzuführen. Viele Mitgliedsstaaten haben mittlerweile die Vorgaben in ihr nationales Recht umgesetzt. Die Gesetzgeber verfolgen damit eine Reihe von Zielen: Armut soll bekämpft, die Binnennachfrage gestärkt und die gewerkschaftliche Durchsetzungskraft gesteigert werden. Hinzu kommt auf europäischer Ebene die Absicht, die Einkommens- und Lebensverhältnisse innerhalb der Union einander anzugleichen." (Textauszug, IAB-Doku)

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Ressourcen und Bedarfe in Einfacharbeit : Analysen und erste Gestaltungsansätze in Logistik und Pflege im Verbundprojekt 'ressource' (2025)

    Bleses, Peter; Ritter, Wolfgang;

    Zitatform

    Bleses, Peter & Wolfgang Ritter (Hrsg.) (2025): Ressourcen und Bedarfe in Einfacharbeit : Analysen und erste Gestaltungsansätze in Logistik und Pflege im Verbundprojekt 'ressource'. (Schriftenreihe Institut Arbeit und Wirtschaft 43), Bremen, 92 S. DOI:10.26092/elib/4370

    Abstract

    "Das Verbundprojekt ressource erforscht und gestaltet Arbeitsbedingungen für Beschäftigte in Einfacharbeit, insbesondere in der Logistik und in gesundheitsbezogenen Dienstleistungen in der Region NordWest. Im Fokus des iaw-papers stehen systematische Bedarfs- und Anforderungsanalysen, die institutionelle, organisationale und individuelle Herausforderungen sowie vorhandene Ressourcen im Hinblick auf gesundheitsförderliche Arbeitsgestaltung und Kompetenzentwicklung erfassen. Methodisch setzt das Projekt auf einen reflexiv-iterativen Mixed-Methods-Ansatz, der qualitative und quantitative Verfahren kombiniert und partizipativ angelegt ist. Die Ergebnisse zeigen eine hohe Komplexität der betrieblichen Herausforderungen, die in vier Gestaltungsperspektiven gebündelt werden: Kommunikation, Wertschätzung, Lernen/Lernorganisation sowie Qualität der Arbeit. Diese Themenfelder sind eng miteinander verwoben und betreffen sowohl Führungsverhalten und Arbeitsbedingungen als auch strukturelle Rahmenbedingungen. Branchenspezifisch treten in der Logistik vor allem physische, in der Pflege und Betreuung eher auch psychosoziale Belastungen auf. Daraus ergeben sich differenzierte Anforderungen an betriebliche Gestaltungsansätze. Im Projekt werden innovative methodische Zugänge erprobt, etwa die dialogorientierte Methode Rooms of Error. Ziel des Verbundprojekts ist der Aufbau eines Kompetenzzentrums in der Region NordWest, das praxisnahes Wissen zur Gestaltung und Entwicklung von Einfacharbeit langfristig sichert und weiterentwickelt. Damit leistet ressource einen Beitrag zur arbeitswissenschaftlichen Erschließung von Einfacharbeit und zur Entwicklung zukunftsfähiger Arbeitswelten." (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Bridging the wage gap: A discussion of wage subsidies to low-paid workers and their costs in Italy (2025)

    Bonatti, Luigi; Lorenzetti, Lorenza Alexandra; Traverso, Silvio;

    Zitatform

    Bonatti, Luigi, Lorenza Alexandra Lorenzetti & Silvio Traverso (2025): Bridging the wage gap: A discussion of wage subsidies to low-paid workers and their costs in Italy. (GLO discussion paper / Global Labor Organization 1552), Essen, 24 S.

    Abstract

    "This paper discusses the potential introduction of permanent public subsidies to supplement the wages of low-paid workers in Italy, taking inspiration from Edmund Phelps' ideas on supporting the working poor. We consider how a negative taxation scheme for low-wage earners might address structural labor market challenges such as low participation rates, labor market segmentation, and widespread in-work poverty. Using a stylized theoretical model, we illustrate how such subsidies could affect wages, employment, and labor supply-demand dynamics, with a particular focus on potential cost implications under different elasticity assumptions. We also consider how design features - such as targeting full-time workers or integrating the subsidy with broader social and economic reforms - could maximize the measure's impact while mitigating risks related to fraud or uneven coverage. Finally, a scenario analysis based on Italian Labor Force Survey data provides an indication of the policy's likely scale and distributional effects. The paper concludes by reflecting on both opportunities and challenges for implementing wage subsidies in Italy's segmented labor market." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    No one-size-fits-all solution. Effects of social policies on in-work poverty (2025)

    Brülle, Jan ;

    Zitatform

    Brülle, Jan (2025): No one-size-fits-all solution. Effects of social policies on in-work poverty. In: European Societies, S. 1-29. DOI:10.1162/euso.a.19

    Abstract

    "The paper studies effects of social policies on in-work poverty risks, distinguishing between measures that either intervene in labor market processes - i.e. predistribution policies - or redistribute towards those with low incomes. The analyses use data from EU-SILC and macro-level indicators from various sources to estimate general as well as household-typespecific effects using longitudinal methods. Results reveal important differences between specific policies: increasing minimum wages contributes to reducing low-wage risks, but has no significant effect on in-work poverty risks. In contrast, there is a negative effect of strict employment protection legislation across almost all household types on in-work poverty, which is consistent with the positive role this measure plays for supporting earnings that are sufficient to provide not only for one person, but also potential dependants in the household. With respect to redistributional policies, both unemployment benefits and benefits to low earners reduce poverty due to their contribution to public poverty-reduction. However, whereas unemployment benefits only reduce in-work poverty among couple households, benefits to low earners mainly contribute to lower poverty risks among employed single parents. Overall, the results underscore that predistributional and redistributional as well as universal and targeted interventions cannot easily substitute each other." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Equalising the effects of automation? The role of task overlap for job finding (2025)

    Dabed, Diego ; Rademakers, Emilie ; Genz, Sabrina ;

    Zitatform

    Dabed, Diego, Sabrina Genz & Emilie Rademakers (2025): Equalising the effects of automation? The role of task overlap for job finding. In: Labour Economics, Jg. 96. DOI:10.1016/j.labeco.2025.102766

    Abstract

    "This paper investigates whether task overlap can equalise the distributional effects of automation for unemployed job seekers displaced from routine jobs. Using a language model, we establish a novel job-to-job task similarity measure. Exploiting the resulting job network to define job markets flexibly, we find that only the most similar jobs affect job finding. Since automation-exposed jobs overlap with other highly exposed jobs, task-based reallocation provides little relief for affected job seekers. We show that this is not true for more recent software exposure, for which task overlap lowers the inequality in job finding." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku, © 2025 The Authors. Published byElsevier B.V.) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    The Labor Market Impacts of Fair Work Legislation (2025)

    Gruber, Anja ;

    Zitatform

    Gruber, Anja (2025): The Labor Market Impacts of Fair Work Legislation. In: ILR review, S. 1-32. DOI:10.1177/00197939251355234

    Abstract

    "Fair Workweek (FWW) ordinances, which typically require employers to provide workers with advance notice of their schedules and extra pay for last-minute changes, have become an increasingly debated policy tool to address the unpredictability of low-wage work in the United States. In this article, the author studies the labor market impacts of the Oregon FWW law using data on treated workers from the Quarterly Workforce Indicators and American Community Survey, and a variety of empirical approaches that address the factors complicating such a labor market analysis. Taken together, the evidence points to limited effects on the average labor market outcomes of workers covered by the legislation. However, findings indicate increased employment and hours worked for men, and decreased employment and hours worked for women. Also, results show consistent evidence of decreased average monthly earnings for newly hired women at treated employers. Despite the ability of employers to bypass compensation requirements through voluntary standby lists, this study identifies compositional effects on the workforce resulting from FWW legislation." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Niedriglohnbeschäftigung 2022 - Deutlicher Rückgang in Westdeutschland (2025)

    Kalina, Thorsten;

    Zitatform

    Kalina, Thorsten (2025): Niedriglohnbeschäftigung 2022 - Deutlicher Rückgang in Westdeutschland. (IAQ-Report 2025-03), Duisburg, 17 S. DOI:10.17185/duepublico/83214

    Abstract

    "Das Niedriglohnrisiko ist in Deutschland zwischen 2021 und 2022 insgesamt um fast zwei Prozentpunkte auf 19 % gesunken. Anders als in früheren Jahren zeigte sich vor allem in Westdeutschland ein deutlicher Rückgang von 19,9 % auf 17,9 %. Von dieser positiven Entwicklung konnten Beschäftigtengruppen mit einem hohen Niedriglohnrisiko, wie etwa Ausländer*innen, Beschäftigte mit Migrationshintergrund oder befristet Beschäftigte, nur zum Teil profitieren. Vielfach reduzierte sich das Niedriglohnrisiko für Beschäftigtengruppen, die im Allgemeinen eher eine überdurchschnittliche Entlohnung haben (Akademiker*innen, Männer, mittlere Altersgruppen). Ferner sank es eher in sozialversicherungspflichtiger Teilzeitbeschäftigung als in Minijobs. Ein Rückgang des Niedriglohnrisikos war für die jeweiligen Gruppen meistens nicht mit Beschäftigungsverlusten verbunden, einzige Ausnahme sind befristet Beschäftigte. Für tarifgebundene Beschäftigte ist das Niedriglohnrisiko mit knapp 11 % deutlich geringer als für nicht tarifgebundene Beschäftigte mit gut 26 %. Maßnahmen zur Stärkung der Tarifbindung könnten helfen, den Niedriglohnsektor weiter zu verkleinern." (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Employers and Unemployment Insurance Take-Up (2025)

    Lachowska, Marta ; Woodbury, Stephen A. ; Sorkin, Isaac;

    Zitatform

    Lachowska, Marta, Isaac Sorkin & Stephen A. Woodbury (2025): Employers and Unemployment Insurance Take-Up. In: The American economic review, Jg. 115, H. 8, S. 2529-2573. DOI:10.1257/aer.20230195

    Abstract

    "We quantify the employer's role in unemployment insurance (UI) take-up. Employer effects on claiming and appeals are substantial, and those effects are negatively correlated, consistent with appeals deterring claims. Low-wage workers are less likely to claim and more likely to have their claims appealed than median-wage workers. Employer effects help explain these income gradients, so equalizing employer effects on claiming would increase the progressivity of UI. Finally, the main source of targeting error in UI is that eligible workers do not claim." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Low-pay work and the risk of poverty: a dynamic analysis for European countries (2025)

    Mussida, Chiara ; Sciulli, Dario ;

    Zitatform

    Mussida, Chiara & Dario Sciulli (2025): Low-pay work and the risk of poverty: a dynamic analysis for European countries. In: Journal of Economic Inequality, S. 1-24. DOI:10.1007/s10888-025-09666-9

    Abstract

    "This paper explores how householders’ and partners' low-pay conditions affect the risk of poverty ofEuropean households. We use 2016–2019 longitudinal European Union Statistics on Income and Living Conditions data, model poverty and labour market outcomes, and account for possible endogeneity of low-pay work in the poverty equation. Low-pay work is defined on gross hourly wage basis. We find that low-pay work increases the risk of poverty compared to high-pay conditions. Notably, when compared to non-employment, the effect of low-pay work on poverty differs between householders and partners. The effect tends to be stronger for the former and smaller for the latter, which stresses the leading role of householders in income formation and the added-worker role of partners in households. The risk of poverty for low-pay workers is even reinforced by their higher probability of being employed in job positions with fewer annual working hours, such as part-time and temporary contracts. The magnitude of low-pay effects on poverty appears to be associated with institutions capable of sustaining the wage floor, earnings and income inequalities, and the generosity of social transfers. We find evidence of feedback effects from poverty on future labour market outcomes, suggesting a self-reinforcing mechanism between poverty and poor labour conditions, which along with limited upward mobility in the labour markets, may lead societies toward persistent income segmentation." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Ideational Power or Political Demand? Tracing the Logics of In-Work Benefit Reforms in France and the United Kingdom (2025)

    Robertson, Ewan ;

    Zitatform

    Robertson, Ewan (2025): Ideational Power or Political Demand? Tracing the Logics of In-Work Benefit Reforms in France and the United Kingdom. In: Political studies, S. 1-28. DOI:10.1177/00323217251340856

    Abstract

    "In recent decades, numerous welfare states have implemented in-work benefits to ‘make work pay’ and tackle in-work poverty. To explain the adoption and institutionalization of this instrument, studies tend to emphasize either socio-political demand or ideational influences as motivators of policy decisions. However, the relative importance of these causal logics, and the relationship between them, remains ambiguous. To advance this debate, this article examines in-work benefit reforms in two welfare states: France and the United Kingdom. Examining reforms from the late 1990s to the 2010s, findings suggest that policy change and convergence were driven by an ideational rather than a demand-based logic. Reforms were more strongly motivated by the shared interpretive frameworks of policymakers and their instrumental use of ideas (ideational power) rather than the demands of voters and organized interests. This finding on the specific drivers of in-work benefits contributes wider insights into the roles of ideas in public policy." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Precarious Masculinities: Migrant Working Men’s Masculinities as Self-Exploitation in a Mediterranean Restaurant in Glasgow (2025)

    Theodoropoulos, Panos ; Lawton-Westerland, Sam ;

    Zitatform

    Theodoropoulos, Panos & Sam Lawton-Westerland (2025): Precarious Masculinities: Migrant Working Men’s Masculinities as Self-Exploitation in a Mediterranean Restaurant in Glasgow. In: Work, Employment and Society, S. 1-20. DOI:10.1177/09500170251336990

    Abstract

    "Drawing on a covert ethnography of a Mediterranean restaurant in Glasgow, this article analyzes how practices characteristic of hegemonic masculinity are incorporated by male migrant workers in the process of crafting labor identities. Building on Connell’s framework of hegemonic masculinity, the researchers found that performances of masculinity operated in a way that, while allowing subjects to feel some degree of power, also ultimately reinforced the individualising pressures promoted by the labor process. It is therefore argued that hegemonic masculinity is critical in providing an avenue through which experiences of exploitation are naturalised by precarious labor workforces." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Class, gender and the work of working‐class women amid turbulent times (2025)

    Warren, Tracey ; Torres, Luis ; Tarlo, Ruth ; Lyonette, Clare ;

    Zitatform

    Warren, Tracey, Luis Torres, Clare Lyonette & Ruth Tarlo (2025): Class, gender and the work of working‐class women amid turbulent times. In: The British journal of sociology, Jg. 76, H. 1, S. 96-113. DOI:10.1111/1468-4446.13147

    Abstract

    "The article focuses on the work of working-class women (WCW) amid turbulent times. Its timespan is just prior to and during the Covid-19 pandemic in the UK. The women's work, and the key skills involved, are fundamental to everyday lives, but both have been under-valued and under-rewarded. The pandemic shone a fresh light on the societal importance of this work and highlighted how its under-valuation and the women's systemic low pay and inferior working conditions have serious ramifications not only for individual workers and their families but for the provision of key services. The article centres WCW, at the intersection of classed and gendered disadvantage, to ask about inequalities in work experiences. Analysing nationally representative samples of thousands of workers in the UK prior to and as Covid-19 rolled out, we compare WCW with other workers. We show that the women faced both persistent and new inequalities at work: enduring low earnings, pandemic-led risks to jobs and paid hours, little opportunity to work from home or flexibly, and stressful key working roles. We reveal the heavily classed nature of some of these findings, show that others were more strongly gendered, while still others were classed and gendered outcomes that require intersectional analyses of the women's working lives." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Minimum Wage Effects and Monopsony Explanations (2025)

    Wiltshire, Justin; McPherson, Carl; Reich, Michael ; Sosinskiy, Denis;

    Zitatform

    Wiltshire, Justin, Carl McPherson, Michael Reich & Denis Sosinskiy (2025): Minimum Wage Effects and Monopsony Explanations. In: Journal of labor economics, S. 1-46. DOI:10.1086/735551

    Abstract

    "We present the first causal analysis of a seven-year run-up of minimum wages to $15. Using a novel stacked county-level synthetic control estimator and data on fast-food restaurants, we find substantial pay growth and no disemployment. Our results hold among lower-wage counties and counties without local minimum wages. Minimum wage increases reduce Separation rates and raise wages faster than prices at McDonald’s stores; both findings imply a monopsonistic labor market with declining rents. In the tight post-pandemic labor market, when laborsupply becomes more elastic, we find positive employment effects. These become larger and statistically significant after addressing pandemic-response confounds." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Minimum wages and insurance within the firm (2024)

    Adamopoulou, Effrosyni; Rachedi, Omar; Manaresi, Francesco; Yurdagul, Emircan;

    Zitatform

    Adamopoulou, Effrosyni, Francesco Manaresi, Omar Rachedi & Emircan Yurdagul (2024): Minimum wages and insurance within the firm. (ZEW discussion paper 24-021), Mannheim, 66 S.

    Abstract

    "Minimum wages generate an asymmetric pass-through of firm shocks across workers. We establish this result leveraging employer-employee data on Italian metalmanufacturing firms, which face different wage floors that vary within occupations. In response to negative firm productivity shocks, workers close to the wage floors experience higher job separations but no wage loss. However, the wage of high-paid workers decreases, and more so in firms with higher incidence of minimum wages. A neoclassical model with complementarities across workers with different skills rationalizes these findings. Our results uncover a novel channel that tilts the welfare gains of minimum wages toward low-paid workers." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Have low-paid jobs increased in the Swedish labor market? Defining low pay in the context of the Nordic model (2024)

    Alfonsson, Johan ; Vulkan, Patrik ; Berglund, Tomas ;

    Zitatform

    Alfonsson, Johan, Tomas Berglund & Patrik Vulkan (2024): Have low-paid jobs increased in the Swedish labor market? Defining low pay in the context of the Nordic model. In: Economic and Industrial Democracy, Jg. 45, H. 4, S. 1090-1111. DOI:10.1177/0143831X231215597

    Abstract

    "Can the Nordic wage-setting model, where social partners decide wages through collective agreements, counteract a growing low-paid sector? This article tests four definitions of low-paid jobs to analyze whether this sector has grown for the period 2005–2020 in Sweden. Despite policy changes pointing towards growth, all definitions show a slight decrease in low-paid jobs over time. The authors argue that the industrial relations system, with the aim of keeping the industry wage increases in check to aid export competitiveness, also sets a uniform level wage that limits low-paid jobs. It is also found that low pay in the Swedish setting is partly a result of working less than full-time or having unstable employment, and service workers and those with low education are becoming increasingly common in this position." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    The U.S. Low-Wage Structure: A McWage Comparison (2024)

    Ashenfelter, Orley; Jurajda, Štepán;

    Zitatform

    Ashenfelter, Orley & Štepán Jurajda (2024): The U.S. Low-Wage Structure: A McWage Comparison. (IZA discussion paper / Forschungsinstitut zur Zukunft der Arbeit 17142), Bonn, 34 S.

    Abstract

    "Thanks to standardized work protocol and technology of McDonald's restaurants, the hourly wage of McDonald's Basic Crew enables wage comparisons under near-identical skill inputs and hedonic job conditions. McWages capture labor costs in entry-level jobs, while the Big Macs (earned) Per Hour (BMPH) index measures corresponding purchasing power of wages. We document large and growing geographical wage differences in standardized jobs using data covering most U.S. counties during 2016-2023. Before the Covid-19 pandemic, there was no BMPH growth where minimum wages stayed constant, but the pandemic wage increase, which diminished the importance of minimum wages, was stronger in these areas." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    In-work poverty in Western Europe. A longitudinal perspective (2024)

    Barbieri, Paolo ; Cutuli, Giorgio ; Scherer, Stefani ;

    Zitatform

    Barbieri, Paolo, Giorgio Cutuli & Stefani Scherer (2024): In-work poverty in Western Europe. A longitudinal perspective. In: European Societies, Jg. 26, H. 4, S. 1232-1264. DOI:10.1080/14616696.2024.2307013

    Abstract

    "This study investigates levels and determinants of in-work poverty (IWP) in Western Europe using EU-SILC longitudinal data 2004-2019. We compared IWP risk and their dynamics across fourteen countries by examining individual labor market positions, household total labor supplies, and employment patterns. We further explored the social class gradient in exposure to IWP, as well as drivers and patterns of longitudinal accumulation of poverty. Relying on a single (standard) earner is often not enough to keep families out of poverty, confirming the importance of dual-earner household arrangements, even if they entail non-standard employment conditions for one partner. This holds particularly true for countries with high levels of IWP and for less privileged social and occupational groups across all contexts. Analyzing IWP inertia, we examined the interplay between genuine state dependence (GSD) and unobserved heterogeneity in the accumulation of economic disadvantage over time. Previous experiences with IWP can lead to future IWP for some, yet this causal effect appears rather small. Our findings have clear implications for the social stratification of risk and policies designed to combat poverty accumulation." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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