The wage and employment effects of the minimum wage predicted by the standard neoclassical theory rely on
a profit maximizing firm, not on a Government employer that can cover the higher wage bill by raising taxes,
reducing expenditure, or simply printing money. If the public sector has an inelastic labour demand, the
associated non-negative employment effect might offset some of the negative employment effect observed in
the private sector and the overall employment effect might be less adverse. This is particularly so if the public
sector is overpopulated by minimum wage workers, as in Brazil. There is very limited evidence on the
minimum wage effects in developing countries, and none whatsoever on the minimum wage effects across the
private and public sectors. This paper estimates the effects of the minimum wage on wages and employment
in both the private and public sectors. The data used is an under-explored monthly Brazilian household
survey from 1982 to 2000 at individual and regional levels. Robust results suggest that the minimum wage
compresses the distribution of both sectors, but in line with a stronger effect in the private sector, more
adverse employment effects in the long run are also observed in that sector. In the public sector, no evidence
of adverse employment effects was uncovered.