Minimum Wage Raises Us All

by: Drum Major Institute

Thu Jun 11, 2009 at 14:56


Originally posted by Amy Traub at DMIBlog.

Over the past few weeks, I've explored a variety of proposals for additional federal stimulus measures. The federal government could make greater investments in repairing public infrastructure; fund the construction of affordable housing; extend tax credits to employers who increase employee health coverage; provide incentives for states to expand access to food stamps, welfare, and Medicaid; or even create a mass public jobs program. So far, none of those proposals is in the cards. But one overlooked recovery measure is already underway: the minimum wage increase scheduled for July 2009.

More in the extended entry.

Drum Major Institute :: Minimum Wage Raises Us All
A new research brief from Kai Filion at the Economic Policy Institute highlights the stimulative impact of raising the minimum wage.

Remember that back in 2007, Congress obliged President Bush to sign a long-delayed minimum wage increase into law by attaching it to a must-pass war appropriations measure. After ten years in which the value of the minimum wage was continuously eroded by inflation, Congress raised the minimum from $5.15 to $5.85 an hour in 2007. In 2008, it went up to $6.55. Next month, it's headed up to $7.25. And the economy is benefiting. So far, minimum wage increases have generated $4.9 billion in spending according to Filion, while the next increase will produce $5.5 billion in additional spending. As Filion succinctly explains "by increasing workers' take-home pay, families gain both financial security and an increased ability to purchase goods and services, thus creating jobs for other Americans."

The issue brief also takes on the most familiar minimum wage misconception - that raising pay inherently means increasing unemployment. Surveying a bevy of recent studies that have failed to detect significant increases in unemployment when the minimum wage rises, the issue brief considers factors like improved productivity, better employee retention and the stimulative effect of increased spending which may help explain why, in practice, jobs don't disappear when low pay gets a mandatory boost.

The minimum wage increase all queued up and ready for July is good news, but of course there's more policy work to be done. During the campaign President Obama pledged to seek an increase in the minimum wage to $9.50 by 2011, a measure that would provide great additional stimulus if the first steps began soon. Add that to the stimulus policy wish list.


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Flatter Economy (4.00 / 3)
If you remember those multiplier charts everyone kept posting during the stimulus talks, the multipliers all had one thing in common.  The more poorer the recipient of stimulus money the more likely they were to spend it and the better stimulated the economy.

Tickle down is based on having investment money available.  While it is theoretically possible to have an economy where there isn't enough investment money available and trickle down might actually be worth while encouraging, I don't think the U.S. has ever, ever been in that situation.  In fact, our bubble economy of the past couple decades is largely caused by too much investment money around.

The bottom line is a healthier economy is a flatter economy.


Possibly at one time (0.00 / 0)
I don't want to start a holy war here, but I think when the highest tax bracket was 90% is a time when investment money wasn't as readily available.

Maybe someone here can prove me wrong.


[ Parent ]
Amen Brother Man (0.00 / 0)
The US should adopt something like what we have here, where the state minimum is automatically indexed to inflation every year.  

Here being Washington State (0.00 / 0)
BTW: what the hell ever happened to Stoller?  

[ Parent ]
minimum wage- unimployment B.S. (0.00 / 0)
 What great americans these opponents of minimum wage advancement are! Why they currently employ people they do not really need, just to be good guys. But the extent of their benevolence is limited. They will eliminate the unnecessary employees if forced to pay any more wages....What tripe! NO ONE hires you because they like you; only because they NEED you. And they only keep you on the job as long as there is need for that position to be filled; none are kept on the payroll that are unnecessary. This bogus argument is designed for the level of intelligence of the standard rape-public-can voter. You know the type, always being tricked into voting against their economic interests by misdirection and decit, but never learning from past mistakes. None so blind as he who will not see.

Government by organized money is no better than government by organized mob..... FDR

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