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    The Atlantic Wire

    What Actually Happens When You Raise the Minimum Wage

    Insisting that raising the federal minimum wage to $9 an hour would cost jobs, House Speaker John Boehner has already rejected President Obama's State of the Union call to bring it up from $7.25. "When you raise the price of employement, guess what happens? You get less of it," Boehner said. Here's research that says otherwise:

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    It does not cost jobs. As The New Republic's Jonathan Cohn explains, that's because some research indicates that the higher cost of hiring someone is offset by the stability an employer gets out of it -— better paid workers quit less. (The White House says Costco and Stride Rite have found this to be true.) Other research finds that the effect on employment would be limited, Bloomberg's Evan Soltas explains. On the other hand, it's possible these better-paying low-skilled jobs end up going to teenagers from wealthy families, University of California - Irvine professor David Neumark told The Wall Street Journal. And while correlation is not causation, it's hard not to notice that the states without minimum wage laws — Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, South Carolina, Tennessee — do not have the best economies in the union. 

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    It would reduce income inequality. Two studies have shown that raising minimum wage would help raise incomes of poor people, Soltas writes.

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    It could help the economy. People who make less money tend to spend a bigger portion of it. A 2011 study by the Federal Reserve of Chicago found that for every $1 increase in the minimum wage, the worker's household spends about $2,800 more a year. The Economic Policy Institute said in August that raising the minimum wage to $9.40 by 2014 would increase gross domestic product by $25 billion, and create 100,000 new jobs.

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    In fact, the real problem might be Obama is aiming too low. When Obama was running for president in 2008, he wanted to raise the minimum wage to $9.50 an hour. That would be $10.13 in today's dollars, Cohn notes. And Obama doesn't want it to take effect until 2015. Plus, we're missing some people. Obama didn't say it in his State of the Union address, but the White House released a memo saying he favored raising the tipped minimum wage, too, though it doesn't specify by how much. This is important, because the number of people working in these jobs is growing faster than in other industries. The Leisure and Hospitality industry has recovered faster than other sectors, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. It added 77,000 jobs in the last three months, and 80 percent of those new jobs came from food services and drinking establishments. It has recovered all jobs lost in the recession. And yet it is one of the lowest-paid sectors — it has the highest percentage of workers making minimum wage or less. The minimum wage for tipped workers is $2.13 an hour. This hasn't changed in more than a decade.

    381 comments

    • PC BITES  •  2 days 9 hrs ago
      I haven't had a raise in 7 years. Hopefully if they keep raising the minimum wage I will start getting raises again in a few more years.
      • Ryan 10 hrs ago
        also PC, what do you charge to trim an oak tree in my front yard and have your lady clean a 2 bedroom house ?
    • Mystery47  •  1 day 15 hrs ago
      In my supermarket, they have pictures from when they started in the 1920's and 1930's.
      Pies were 12 cents - now they are $ 7 to $ 12. Steaks were 25 cents per pound - now they are $ 10 per lb and higher. People only made a couple dollars per day but it was enough to feed a family.
      So, it is all relative and a balance. I'm living on Social Security and just found out that the poverty level is considered $ 28,500 per year. That's $ 14 per hour. I rarely made that when I was working as an Engineering Technician. You need a union job to get that kind of money.
      It is odd, though, that when there is LESS demand for gasoline, the price drops.
      Doesn't that seem like they are artificially holding that price up?
    • 569  •  1 day 13 hrs ago
      How about do us all a favor and outlaw tips and put everyone under minimum wage?
    • David  •  3 days ago
      I'm tired of this back and forth bickering and whining between the parties. I would like to see our elected officials work together for US instead of their parties. Something is always wrong when everybody thinks they are right. Nothing will get done with all this finger pointing.
    • dd  •  1 day 21 hrs ago
      one should fact check these "fact checkers"
    • Richard  •  2 days 9 hrs ago
      Everything else going up.
    • Bobby  •  1 day 12 hrs ago
      In 1970 minimum wage was $1.65 and gas was 0.25. Gas is now $3.50 and rising, so shouldn't minimum wage be $23.10?
    • Nickolas  •  1 day 13 hrs ago
      "It would reduce income inequality. Two studies have shown that raising minimum wage would help raise incomes of poor people, Soltas writes."

      I just found this humorous. There needed to be two studies to find out that raising an hourly rate helps raise incomes.
    • Xj  •  1 day 18 hrs ago
      If Boehner is correct, then why isn't he passing legislation to LOWER the minimum wage?
    • JW  •  1 day 12 hrs ago
      When you consider the fact that grocery retailers operate with a 1% profit margin, how do you expect them to pay for this pay raise? Full time employees will become part time or on-call temps.
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