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National Minimum Wages: International Experience
Patrick Belser
Senior EconomistInternational Labour office (ILO)belser@ilo.org
Conditions of Work and Employment (TRAVAIL) Social Protection Sector
Structure of the presentation
Part I: A short history of minimum wage systems
Part II: The level of minimum wages and employment effects
Conditions of Work and Employment (TRAVAIL) Social Protection Sector
Some definitions
ILO legal experts have defined the minimum wage as: “the minimum sum payable to a worker for work performed or services rendered, within a given period (…) which may not be reduced either by individual or collective agreement (and) which is guaranteed by law”.
Minimum wages refer to gross earnings before taxes, social security contributions and other statutory deductions
Minimum wages can be hourly, daily or monthly. If they are daily or monthly they should be set for workers’ normal working time. In other words, workers should not be forced to work overtime to obtain the minimum wage.
Conditions of Work and Employment (TRAVAIL) Social Protection Sector
A short history of minimum wages
Minimum wages have developed in New Zealand and Australia at the very end of the 19th century, and the U.K. adopted its first minimum wage legislation in 1909. These minimum wages covered relatively few categories of workers, with particularly low levels of pay: they started as a substitute for collective bargaining in low-wage industries.
This industry-specific perspective is reflected in the ILO Minimum Wage-Fixing Machinery Convention No.26 (1928), designed for workers employed in trades or part of trades “in which no arrangements exist for the effective regulation of wages by collective agreement or otherwise and wages are exceptionally low” (Art. I) . It covers manufacture and commerce, not agriculture.
Conditions of Work and Employment (TRAVAIL) Social Protection Sector
A short history of minimum wages
After the Second World War Coverage expanded and national minimum wages appeared in France (1950) and elsewhere; In the U.S., coverage of the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 increased from about 20% of the U.S. workforce initially to nearly 80% in 1970.
The evolution towards minimum wages with national coverage is reflected in the adoption of ILO Minimum Wage Fixing Convention No.131 (in 1970), which encourages systems which “covers all groups of wage earners” against “unduly low wages”. If some groups are not covered, the Member State should explain the reasons for not covering them.
Conditions of Work and Employment (TRAVAIL) Social Protection Sector
A short history of minimum wagesWhile minimum wages were regarded favourably until the 1970s, the context changed after the oil shock in 1973, the debt crisis in developing countries in the 1980s and the implementation of structural adjustment policies in the 1980s and 1990s. The U.K. abolished the Wage Councils in the 1980s and denounced ILO Convention 26 in 1985.
In the last 2 decades, minimum wage policies have made a comeback. Many countries have recently adopted or reactivated minimum wages. Examples include South Africa, but also Brazil, China, or the U.K. - which introduced a system of national minimum wage in 1999.
Conditions of Work and Employment (TRAVAIL) Social Protection Sector
A short history of minimum wagesBy today about 90% of ILO Member States do have a minimum wage
system in place. As result of history, systems vary between sectoral/occupational and national minimum wages
Conditions of Work and Employment (TRAVAIL) Social Protection Sector
A short history of minimum wages
Which system is better? Both are legitimate but:
A regional study in Latin America concluded that the least effective minimum wages institutions are those that are too complex and, therefore, that “it is better to design a simple system that is well understood by all, rather than trying to fully address the heterogeneous needs of the labour force” (Cunningham, 2007, p.4).
Complex systems can also test the limits of a country’s institutional capacity: including the quality of wage statistics, and the enforcement capacity of labour administrations. When the level of aspired complexity exceeds the capacity of the country, minimum wages cease to be an effective instrument of social protection.
Conditions of Work and Employment (TRAVAIL) Social Protection Sector
A short history of minimum wagesPB5
99%
70-80%
Legal “coverage” is lower with sectoral minimum wages
Slide 9
PB5 Patrick Belser, 2010/12/13
Conditions of Work and Employment (TRAVAIL) Social Protection Sector
A short history of minimum wages
70-80%
99%
Non-compliance is sometimes higher in complex systems
PB4
Slide 10
PB4 Patrick Belser, 2010/12/13
Conditions of Work and Employment (TRAVAIL) Social Protection Sector
A short history of minimum wages
“MW zone”
“Collective bargaining zone”
There is a risk that complex systems of minimum wages can become substitute for collective bargaining (eg Philippines). Minimum wages should be targeted at the lowest-paid employees.
Conditions of Work and Employment (TRAVAIL) Social Protection Sector
A short history of minimum wages
Simple minimum wages are is easier to communicate, and awareness tends to lead to better compliance
US (1956)Lee and McCann (forthcoming)
Conditions of Work and Employment (TRAVAIL) Social Protection Sector
Part II
The level of minimum wages and employment effects
Conditions of Work and Employment (TRAVAIL) Social Protection Sector
Level and employment effects
Recent experiences have changed the perception of minimum wages. Many studies now show that when minimum wages are set at a reasonable level, they have no significant employment effect one way or the other.
In 2009, after 10 years of monitoring, the UK Low Pay Commission (employers and workers) had not found any significant negative effect on employment. Among policy experts, the minimum wage was named as “the most successful government policy of the last 30 years”.
Conditions of Work and Employment (TRAVAIL) Social Protection Sector
Level and employment effects
Consumption
AggregateDemand
Output and Investment
Employment
Wages and other household income
Why no employment effects? It raises costs to employers but also increases consumption by the low paid.
Conditions of Work and Employment (TRAVAIL) Social Protection Sector
Level and employment effectsA balanced approach is reflected in ILO Convention No. 131 which calls on policy makers to take account of:
a) the needs of workers and their families, taking into account the general level of wages in the country, the cost of living, social security benefits, and the relative living standards of other social groups; and
b) economic factors, including requirements of economic development, levels of productivity, and the desirability of attaining and maintaining a high level of employment.
Conditions of Work and Employment (TRAVAIL) Social Protection Sector
Level and employment effects
The needs of workers and their families can be assessed or calculated through the concept of a minimum living wage.
One simplified formula and purely hypothetical example:
subsistence minimum * average household size Number of household members who work full-time
200 US$ * 4 adult equivalents = 400 US$2
Conditions of Work and Employment (TRAVAIL) Social Protection Sector
Economic effects depend on the proportion of wage-earners
Level and employment effects
affected by a certain minimum wage, and can be evaluated through indicators such minimum wages / average wages
Figure 6: The Level of Minimum Wages in Developed Economies and European Union in 2010 (% of Full‐time median wages)
Source: UK Low Pay Commission, 2012
05
1015
20
perc
ent (
%)
0 .2 .4 .6 .8
ratio of minimum wages to average wages
Conditions of Work and Employment (TRAVAIL) Social Protection Sector
Level and employment effects There is no magic formula: using indicators, levels should be
agreed by Governments and social partners
Conditions of Work and Employment (TRAVAIL) Social Protection Sector
Level and employment effects
The Minimum Wage Fixing Convention, 1970 (No.131) calls for the provision for the direct participation” in the operation of the minimum wage system of :
(a) representatives of organisations of employers and workers concerned or, where no such organisations exist, representatives of employers and workers concerned, on a basis of equality;
(b) persons having recognised competence for representing the general interests of the country and appointed after full consultation with representative organisations where such organisations exist and such consultation is in accordance with national law or practice.” => importance of objective data and analysis
of employers and workers concerned,
Conditions of Work and Employment (TRAVAIL) Social Protection Sector
Effective minimum wages need to be increased from time
Level and employment effects
to time, as the cost of living evolves and labour productivity increases. In some countries this done at regular intervals in others it is done in an ad hoc, unpredictable way.
In Brazil, the minimum wage is increased by the sum of inflation in the previous year plus the GDP growth of 2 years before (if >0).
In France, the minimum wage is automatically increased by the amount of previous year inflation, whenever inflation is in excess of 2%, and no less than half of the average hourly wage growth of blue collar workers.
Conditions of Work and Employment (TRAVAIL) Social Protection Sector
A note of cautionMinimum wages have been used for more than a century to ensure that economic growth translates into a better life for those at the bottom of the wage distribution. But it is not
a substitute for economic growth !
Conditions of Work and Employment (TRAVAIL) Social Protection Sector
Additional considerations
Minimum wage is often used as a basis for calculating social benefits, especially when there is no other socially acceptable benchmark. This can have wide budgetary implications for the State and makes minimum wage adjustment more complex
Minimum wages are only one in a set of tools towards decent living standards for workers and their families. Not a magic bullet. It must be articulated with collective bargaining and social protection policies.
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