Estimating the Effect of an Increase in the
Minimum Wage on Hours Worked and
Employment in Ireland. ESRI DISCUSSION PAPER SERIES IZA DP No. 11632, June 2018
On the 1st of January 2016 the Irish National Minimum Wage increased from €8.65 to
€9.15 per hour, an increase of approximately six percent. We use a difference-in-differences
estimator to evaluate whether the change in the minimum wage affected the hours
worked and likelihood of job loss of minimum wage workers. The results indicate that the
increase in the minimum wage had a negative and statistically significant effect on the
hours worked of minimum wage workers, with an average reduction of approximately 0.5
hours per week. The effect on minimum wage workers on temporary contracts was higher
at 3 hours per week. We found a corresponding increase in part-time employment of 2
percentage points for all minimum wage workers and 10 percentage points for those on
temporary contracts. We find no clear evidence that the increase in the minimum wage led
to an in-creased probability of becoming unemployed or inactive in the six-month period
following the rate change
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