National Post

This hike hurts immigrants

- Anindya Sen Anindya Sen is a research fellow at the C. D. Howe Institute and professor of economics and director of the Master of Public Service program at the University of Waterloo.

Ontario’s proposed 20.6 - per- c e nt i ncrease in the minimum wage from $ 11.60 in October to $ 14 on January 2018 is the largest dollar hike in any Canadian province over the past two decades. By Jan. 1, 2019, the minimum wage is scheduled to reach $15. Poverty advocates argue many low- income households will benefit. But they should also take a close look at the Canadian evidence that shows that minimumwag­e hikes will lead to fewer jobs for immigrants.

Much of the current Ontario debate has focused on either U. S.- based research or the experience in s ome s pecific ci t i es. Ontario Labour Minister Kevin Flynn said that wage increases in San Francisco and Seattle led to increasing employment in those areas. The most recent data out of Seattle released this week, however, now show t hat t ake- home pay f or minimum- wage workers has begun to fall, with their hours apparently being cut as the minimum wage continues to move even higher towards that city’s planned US$15 target.

A substantia­l number of Canadian studies contradict the claims that higher wages lead to more employment. One robust finding that emerges is that minimumwag­e hikes result in lower employment for teens. This is of concern as entry- level jobs help young people develop t i me- management skills in balancing school and work and help them gain valuable profession­al experience.

In a research paper I coauthored with Kathleen Rybczynski that will soon be published in the journal Contempora­ry Economic Policy, we found that a higher minimum wage may possibly be linked to employment r eductions among another key vulnerable demographi­c ignored by previous studies. Based on 185 minimum-wage hikes implemente­d by Canadian provinces from 1981– 2011, we find that increasing minimum wages led to a reduction in employment rates of not just teenagers, but also immigrants. Specifical­ly, a 10- per- cent increase in the minimum wage can be linked to an approximat­ely two- per- cent decline in employment rates of immigrants aged 25 to 54 years old.

From one perspectiv­e, this result should not be surpris- ing: Roughly 19 per cent of immigrants are minimumwag­e employees. Why might a minimum- wage hike hurt immigrants most? If businesses are hiring less, with no change in the supply of available workers, then they may prefer Canadian- born applicants whose experience and qualificat­ions are more easily relatable to Canadian business owners. Whatever the reason, the presence of negative employment impacts on immigrants should be of significan­t policy concern, especially given the well- documented problems of labour- market assimilati­on that new immigrants face.

Adverse minimum- wage effects are not restricted to immigrants. An earlier study I co-authored was the first to investigat­e minimum- wage impacts with respect to the percentage of families falling below Statistics Canada’s Low Income Cut Off, an unofficial but common measure for poverty. We found that a higher minimum wage paradoxica­lly resulted in an increase in the percentage of low- income households, possibly generated by family members losing their jobs as a result of employers responding to higher minimum wages.

The minimum wage has an important role in society. Minimum levels of compensati­on for work should not be determined by market forces and should be set by the government. But the minimum wage — effectivel­y mandating a cash transfer from business to workers — should not be the chief mechanism for keeping people out of poverty. Better-targeted policies can be put in place to improve the living standards of struggling workers. For example, government policy should be framed to assist minimum- wage workers to obtain further education and acquire new skills, enabling them to find new and rewarding careers.

Steep i ncreases to the minimum wage have a high likelihood of leading to more unemployed immigrants as well as more poverty. And these findings are based on much smaller minimumwag­e hikes relative to what Ontario is about to embark upon. Ontario should think again about pushing ahead with steep minimum- wage increases or at least consider a more gradual phase-in.

STEEP MINIMUM-WAGE HIKES LIKE ONTARIO’S ARE LIKELY TO LEAD TO MORE UNEMPLOYED IMMIGRANTS AND MORE POVERTY.

 ?? JOHN LAPPA / POSTMEDIA NEWS ?? Ontario Minister of Labour Kevin Flynn
JOHN LAPPA / POSTMEDIA NEWS Ontario Minister of Labour Kevin Flynn

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