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Centre for finance and development
11 January 2017

Prof. Huang's new working paper on consumption responses to higher minimum wages

New working paper by Prof. Huang and others on the impact of higher minimum wages on consumption behaviour of Chinese households. 

New working paper: The Consumption Response to Minimum Wages: Evidence from Chinese Households by Yi Huang, Ernest Dautovic and Harald Hau

Abstract: This paper evaluates the Chinese minimum wage policy for the period 2002-2009 in terms of its impact on low income household consumption. Using a representative household panel, we find support for the permanent income hypothesis, whereby unanticipated and persistent income increases due to minimum wage policy change are fully spent. The impact is driven by households with at least one child. We infer significant positive welfare effects for low income households based on expenditure increases concentrated in health care and education, whereas a negative employment effect of higher minimum wage cannot be confirmed.