Training and minimum wages: first evidence from the introduction of the minimum wage in Germany

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Abstract

We analyze the short-run impact of the introduction of the new statutory minimum wage in Germany on further training at the workplace level. Applying difference-in-difference methods to data from the IAB Establishment Panel, we do not find a reduction in the training incidence but a slight reduction in the intensity of training at treated establishments. Effect heterogeneities reveal that the negative impact is mostly driven by employer-financed training. On the worker level, we observe a reduction of training for medium- and high-skilled employees but no significant effects on the training of low-skilled employees.

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Bellmann, L., Bossler, M., Gerner, H. D., & Hübler, O. (2017). Training and minimum wages: first evidence from the introduction of the minimum wage in Germany. IZA Journal of Labor Economics, 6(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s40172-017-0058-z

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