Downward Wage Rigidity and Corporate Investmen
Start Page
671
Abstract
Firms reduce investment when facing downward wage rigidity, the inability or unwillingness to adjust wages downward. To document this behavior, I exploit staggered state-level changes in minimum wage laws as an exogenous variation in downward wage rigidity. Following a 1-standard-deviation increase in the minimum wage, firms reduce their investment rate (the ratio of capital
expenditure to capital stock) by 3.08 percentage points. The negative impact is more acute for firms with a higher fraction of minimum wage workers, stronger employment protections, or higher labor intensity. The investment reductions cannot be explained by labor adjustment under capital-labor complementarities. Rather, I identify the aggravation of debt overhang and increased operating
leverage crowding out debt financing as two mechanisms by which downward wage rigidity impedes investment. The findings highlight the unintended consequences of minimum wage policies on corporate investment.
Recommended Citation
Cho, DuckKi
(2025)
"Downward Wage Rigidity and Corporate Investmen,"
Journal of Law and Economics: Vol. 68:
No.
3, Article 6.
Available at:
https://chicagounbound.uchicago.edu/jle/vol68/iss3/6
