Minimum wages and schooling: evidence from the UK's introduction of a national minimum wage

This paper uses the introduction of the national minimum wage in the UK in April 1999 as a 'natural experiment' to analyse the impact of minimum wages on enrolment in schooling. At the time of its introduction, only workers aged 18 years or more were covered by the legislation. The paper...

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Главный автор: Rice, P
Формат: Working paper
Опубликовано: University of Oxford 2010
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author Rice, P
author_facet Rice, P
author_sort Rice, P
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description This paper uses the introduction of the national minimum wage in the UK in April 1999 as a 'natural experiment' to analyse the impact of minimum wages on enrolment in schooling. At the time of its introduction, only workers aged 18 years or more were covered by the legislation. The paper uses panel data for a sample of young people in a given school-year cohort, some of whom were aged 18 years in spring 1999 and therefore eligible to receive the national minimum wage, and others who were aged only 17 years. We compare participation in post-compulsory schooling for the two groups, both before and after the enactment of the legislation and find robust evidence that eligibility for the national minimum wage significantly reduces the probability of participation in post-compulsory schooling for young people living in areas where the national minimum is high relative to local earnings.
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spelling oxford-uuid:aac8e3d2-6e2e-41c2-af0f-13d9dd2f067b2022-03-27T03:17:27ZMinimum wages and schooling: evidence from the UK's introduction of a national minimum wageWorking paperhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_8042uuid:aac8e3d2-6e2e-41c2-af0f-13d9dd2f067bBulk import via SwordSymplectic ElementsUniversity of Oxford2010Rice, PThis paper uses the introduction of the national minimum wage in the UK in April 1999 as a 'natural experiment' to analyse the impact of minimum wages on enrolment in schooling. At the time of its introduction, only workers aged 18 years or more were covered by the legislation. The paper uses panel data for a sample of young people in a given school-year cohort, some of whom were aged 18 years in spring 1999 and therefore eligible to receive the national minimum wage, and others who were aged only 17 years. We compare participation in post-compulsory schooling for the two groups, both before and after the enactment of the legislation and find robust evidence that eligibility for the national minimum wage significantly reduces the probability of participation in post-compulsory schooling for young people living in areas where the national minimum is high relative to local earnings.
spellingShingle Rice, P
Minimum wages and schooling: evidence from the UK's introduction of a national minimum wage
title Minimum wages and schooling: evidence from the UK's introduction of a national minimum wage
title_full Minimum wages and schooling: evidence from the UK's introduction of a national minimum wage
title_fullStr Minimum wages and schooling: evidence from the UK's introduction of a national minimum wage
title_full_unstemmed Minimum wages and schooling: evidence from the UK's introduction of a national minimum wage
title_short Minimum wages and schooling: evidence from the UK's introduction of a national minimum wage
title_sort minimum wages and schooling evidence from the uk s introduction of a national minimum wage
work_keys_str_mv AT ricep minimumwagesandschoolingevidencefromtheuksintroductionofanationalminimumwage