Papers
ReStat2026

Consumption Response to Minimum Wages: Evidence from Chinese Households

Ernest Dautović, Harald Hau, Yi Huang

Source versions
1
Latest record
2026-05-01
Primary source
ReStat
TL;DR

This article evaluates the impact of the Chinese minimum-wage policy on consumption of low-wage households for the period 2002–2009.

ReStatEducationLaborAdministrative data
Metadata matches
Sources
ReStat
Fields
EducationLabor
Methods and data
DescriptiveAdministrative data
Abstract

This article evaluates the impact of the Chinese minimum-wage policy on consumption of low-wage households for the period 2002–2009. Using a representative panel of urban households, we find that the consumption response to minimum-wage income hikes increases in the share of minimum-wage income in total household income. In particular, poorer households fully consume their additional income, while meaningful negative employment effects are absent. The large marginal propensity to consume is driven by households with at least one child, while poor, childless households save two-thirds of a minimum-wage hike. The expenditure increase is concentrated in health care and education with potentially long-lasting benefits to household welfare.

Source versions
ReStat2026-05-01
The Review of Economics and Statistics 108(3):737-754
10.1162/rest_a_01411
Related papers
ReStud2025-11-06The Review of Economic Studies

Demand Stimulus as Social Policy

Alan J Auerbach, Yuriy Gorodnichenko, Daniel Murphy

ReStudEducationLaborAdministrative data