Author Name | MORI Yuko (Tsuda University) / OKUDAIRA Hiroko (Doshisha University) |
---|---|
Creation Date/NO. | May 2025 25-E-042 |
Research Project | Firm Dynamics, Industry, and Macroeconomy |
Download / Links |
Abstract
The margin of adjustment in work hours has received relatively less attention in the minimum wage literature, despite its potentially significant implications for distributional consequences. By applying the frequency distribution approach to a quasi-exogenous policy event in Japan, we find that a minimum wage increase reduced long working-hour jobs while increasing short working-hour jobs disproportionately among women. While the minimum wage had a positive compression effect on the wage distribution for women, its impact on their income inequality was much smaller. This reduced effect was driven by substantial reductions in work hours among women with annual incomes near institutional thresholds set by tax and social benefit provisions. The minimum wage, together with these income-based cutoffs, led women in Japan to work shorter hours.