CGE Analysis of the Impact of the 2024 Minimum Wage Increase on the National Economy in Indonesia

Nur Siti Annazah, Muhammad Fikrie Hazami, Faizal Amir P Nasution, Henriko Tobing

Abstract

One of the minimum wage problems is caused by workers/laborers' needing to agree with the wage increase set. The minimum wage increase is still minimal compared to the high worker need. The Labor Organization president called the government to raise the provincial minimum wage (UMP) and district/city minimum wage (UMK) 2024 by 15%. This figure is obtained from the Decent Living Needs (KHL) survey results and other indicators such as inflation and economic growth. On the other hand, the minimum wage increase of 15% is considered by employers to be unrealistic, considering the condition of the national economy is hit by uncertainty. The government said that determining the minimum wage based on PP 36/2021 and considering the welfare of workers/laborers’ also looks at the Company's capabilities. This paper aims to see new macroeconomic and welfare conditions due to the increase in the minimum wage by 15%. Using the general equilibrium model of static computing (CGE), the analysis results show that an increase in the minimum wage leads to a decrease in demand for labor, especially in labor-intensive sectors. The increase in wages impacts increasing household income, thus indicating an increase in household welfare. However, inflationary pressures brought about by the minimum wage increase mask the increase in revenue, resulting in a decrease in household consumption budgets. This translates into a loss of net well-being, with a more significant impact on urban households than rural households. The output of most sectors, especially labor-intensive sectors, declined, but nominal GDP increased. The increase in nominal GDP is due to rising prices, not actual economic output.

Full text article

Generated from XML file

References

Agenor, P. and Aynaoui, K. (2003) Labor market policies and unemployment in Morocco: A quantitative analysis. World Bank Policy Research Working Paper No. 3091.
Burfisher, M. E. (2011). Introduction to computable general equilibrium models. Introduction to Computable General Equilibrium Models. https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511975004
Boccanfuso, D. and Savard, L. (2011). A Segmented labor supply model estimation for the construction of a CGE microsimulation model: An Application to the Philippines.
Fields, G. and Kanbur, R. (2007). Minimum wages and poverty with income-sharing. Cornel University ILR School collection. Retrieved from: http://digitalcommons.ilr.cornell.edu/articles
Gindling, T. and Terell, K. (2004) The effects of multiple minimum wages throughout the labor market. IZA Discussion paper No. 1154.
Harrison, A. and Leamer. E. (1997). Labor markets in developing countries: an agenda for research. Journal of Labor Economics 15(3): 1-19.
Kurniawati, Ardhian. (2018). Dampak Upah Minimum Terhadap Employment: Pendekatan Difference in Spatial Difference. Jurnal Ketenagakerjaan: Vol. 13 No. 2 (2018)
Lustig, N. and McLeod, D. (1997). Minimum wages and poverty in developing countries: Some empirical evidence. In Edwards, Sebastian and Nora Claudia Lustig eds. Labor Markets in Latin America, Brookings Institution Press, Washington D.C.
Morley, S. (1995). Structural adjustments and the determinants of poverty in latin America.
Shultz, T. P. (1982). Effective protection and distribution of personal income in Colombia. In trade and employment in developing countries, ed. A. O. Krueger. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Wittwer, G. (1999). WAYANG: A General Equilibrium Model adapted for the Indonesian Economy. Edition prepared for ACIAR Project No. 9449. CIES, University of Adelaide (in association with RSPAS, ANU, CASER, Bogor, and CSIS, Jakarta).

Authors

Nur Siti Annazah
anazah.siti@gmail.com (Primary Contact)
Muhammad Fikrie Hazami
Faizal Amir P Nasution
Henriko Tobing
Annazah, N. S., Hazami, M. F., Nasution, F. A. P. and Tobing, H. (2024) “CGE Analysis of the Impact of the 2024 Minimum Wage Increase on the National Economy in Indonesia”, Jurnal Ketenagakerjaan, 19(1), pp. 32–47. doi: 10.47198/jnaker.v19i1.352.

Article Details