Giving Compass' Take:
- Catherine Maclean, Stefan Pichler, and Nicolas R. Ziebarth examine the impact on the labor market of a dozen states passing paid sick leave mandates.
- How can mandated paid sick leave help to prevent the spread of COVID-19?
- Read more about paid sick leave.
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To enable more employees to take paid sick leave, a dozen states have passed sick leave mandates over the past decade in the United States. This paper evaluates empirically and theoretically the labor market effects of these sick pay mandates. To this end, we use governmental firm-level data specifically designed to pinpoint labor compensation, including fringe benefits. Using the National Compensation Survey along with difference-in-differences models in an event study design, we estimate the impact of state-level mandates on actual coverage rates, paid and unpaid sick leave use, labor costs, and non-mandated fringe benefits. We find that the mandates are effective in increasing coverage and reducing inequality in the labor market. As a result of the mandates, sick pay coverage increases significantly by 18 percentage points from a baseline level of 66% in the first two years, but then plateaus over the next four years.
Read the full article about mandated sick pay by Catherine Maclean, Stefan Pichler, and Nicolas R. Ziebarth at Equitable Growth.