The Local Aggregate Effects of Minimum Wage Increases
Using variation in minimum wages across cities and controlling for differences in business-cycle factors and long-run local economic trends, we find that following minimum wage increases, both prices and nominal spending rise modestly. These gains are larger for certain sub-categories of goods such as food away from home and in locations where low-wage workers are a larger share of employment. Further, minimum wage increases are associated with reduced total debt among households with low credit scores, higher auto debt, and increased access to credit.
Published Versions
DANIEL COOPER & MARÍA JOSÉ LUENGO‐PRADO & JONATHAN A. PARKER, 2020. "The Local Aggregate Effects of Minimum Wage Increases," Journal of Money, Credit and Banking, vol 52(1), pages 5-35. citation courtesy of