Mirja Hälbig

Mirja Hälbig
Aktuelle Position

seit 6/19

Wissenschaftliche Mitarbeiterin der Abteilung Strukturwandel und Produktivität

Leibniz-Institut für Wirtschaftsforschung Halle (IWH)

Forschungsschwerpunkte

  • empirische Arbeitsmarktökonomik
  • empirische Produktivitätsforschung

Mirja Hälbig ist seit Juni 2019 Doktorandin in der Abteilung Strukturwandel und Produktivität. Sie forscht zu den Themen Mindestlohn und Produktivität.

Mirja Hälbig studierte an der Goethe-Universität Frankfurt, der Philipps-Universität Marburg sowie an der Universität Leipzig.

Ihr Kontakt

Mirja Hälbig
Mirja Hälbig
Mitglied - Abteilung Strukturwandel und Produktivität
Nachricht senden +49 345 7753-704

Publikationen

Arbeitspapiere

cover_iza-discussion-paper-may2023.PNG

Minimum Wages, Productivity, and Reallocation

Mirja Hälbig Matthias Mertens Steffen Müller

in: IZA Discussion Paper, Nr. 16160, 2023

Abstract

We study the productivity effect of the German national minimum wage by applying administrative firm data. At the firm level, we confirm positive effects on wages and negative employment effects and document higher productivity even net of output price increases. We find higher wages but no employment effects at the level of aggregate industry × region cells. The minimum wage increased aggregate productivity in manufacturing. We do not find that employment reallocation across firms contributed to these aggregate productivity gains, nor do we find improvements in allocative efficiency. Instead, the productivity gains from the minimum wage result from within-firm productivity improvements only.

Publikation lesen

cover_DP_2023-08.jpg

Minimum Wages, Productivity, and Reallocation

Mirja Hälbig Matthias Mertens Steffen Müller

in: IWH Discussion Papers, Nr. 8, 2023

Abstract

We study the productivity effect of the German national minimum wage by applying administrative firm data. At the firm level, we confirm positive effects on wages and negative employment effects and document higher productivity even net of output price increases. We find higher wages but no employment effects at the level of aggregate industry × region cells. The minimum wage increased aggregate productivity in manufacturing. We do not find that employment reallocation across firms contributed to these aggregate productivity gains, nor do we find improvements in allocative efficiency. Instead, the productivity gains from the minimum wage result from within-firm productivity improvements only.

Publikation lesen
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