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Minimum wage hike spreads Blue State unemployment misery

By: Diana Furchtgott-Roth
Special to The Examiner
July 14, 2009

On July 24, the federal minimum wage will rise to $7.25, the third in a series of increases that included a hike to $6.55 in July 2008 and $5.85 in July 2007. These represent a significant increase from the $5.15 rate that prevailed for a decade.

With the increase in unemployment to 9.5 percent in June from 9.4 percent in May, Congress should rethink the hike. Increasing the federal minimum wage is the latest in the Blue State vs. Red State battles, with congressional leadership spreading the pain to reduce the advantages of states with low minimum wage laws.

Take California and Massachusetts, home to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, House Education and Labor Committee Chairman George Miller and Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Chairman Edward Kennedy, all of whom led the charge for the higher federal minimum wage. These states have minimum wage laws that already exceed the new federal one, so their residents and businesses aren’t affected.

Democratic states in the Northeast and the West tend to have minimum wage rates that are higher than the federal, while states with Republican representation in the middle of the country, such as Texas, Oklahoma and Mississippi, generally have minimum wage laws that do not exceed the federal mark.

With the work forces in California, Massachusetts and Illinois declining, and residents migrating to fast-growing states without minimum wage laws, like South Carolina and Alabama, congressional leaders had an incentive to change the playing field by spreading the misery.

The lower cost of living in central states makes the higher minimum wage even harder to absorb, because customers can’t pay the higher costs. The same breakfast could cost $10 in a New York diner and $5 in South Carolina. That’s why it makes no sense for Congress to impose Blue State rates on the Red States, unless it’s to drive up the unemployment rates of their low-skilled workers.

Members of Congress assume that if the minimum wage were raised, all workers would retain their jobs. But this is not the case. An increase to $7.25 an hour, plus the mandatory employer’s share of Social Security, unemployment insurance and workers’ compensation taxes, brings the hourly employer cost close to $8, even without benefits.

With the minimum wage increase, employers will only hire workers who can produce $8 an hour worth of goods or services. That will be fewer people than they employ today. Employers can change technologies or hire more skilled workers to keep their firms in business.

Denying work opportunities to those whose skills and output don’t add up to $8 per hour is not compassionate, it’s manifestly unfair. At a time of rising unemployment, the federal government is dooming unskilled workers to the ranks of the unemployed by saying they cannot even take the first step on the career ladder. That’s not the road to job creation and economic recovery.

Diana Furchtgott-Roth, senior fellow at the Hudson Institute, is a former chief economist of the U.S. Department of Labor.





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Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

smokehouse

Jul 14, 2009

Make no difference to America's enemy, liberals. They sit on their brains all day long.

 

Tantor

Jul 14, 2009

Min wage laws don't lift people up, they cut them off from jobs, they snap off the lower rungs on the economic ladder and leave unskilled laborers abandoned at the bottom. You can not build up the economy by price fixing labor. The min wage hurts most those people it purports to help.

 

christine

Jul 14, 2009

That's not really true. You'd expect to see depressed economies in places that have minimum wage laws, but that's not what we see. Businesses need paying customers, and places that have min wage produce more customers. This causes dollars to circulate more quickly in the economy and everyone benefits. Where people make slave wages, you see them depending on food banks and other freebies which depress the economy. I made $5.25 min wage back in 1994.

 

Mike

Jul 14, 2009

How quaint. You really believe progressives believe in raising the minimum wage to help people.

Increasing the minimum wage increases the number of people who are locked out of the job market, and are thus, in need of government assistance.

Why would the democrats in congress change a program which has been so successful in creating huge numbers of serfs... er... reliable voters dependent upon the democratic party for their daily bread?

Raising the minimum wage is doing just what it was intended to do.

 

joblessSF

Jul 14, 2009

What difference does it make? There aren't any jobs out there anyways. They've been outsourced overseas with big tax breaks to the companies that went overseas.

 

Ed

Jul 15, 2009

"here aren't any jobs out there anyways. They've been outsourced overseas with big tax breaks to the companies that went overseas."

I hope you don't blame them for that - confiscatory taxes on the people who actually produce forced many overseas. Min. wage, as has been pointed out, shuts the door of employment on many unskilled and lesser-skilled people. Why? Because Democrats build their careers largely upon the rape business as well as workers, while swearing to their idiot voters they alone are helping both. This country is doomed.

 

iman

Jul 15, 2009

Two libs in this comments section so far and neither makes a salient point. No wonder the big zero got elected...our education systems dumbs down the electorate so that uninformed and ignorant people pull the lever for whoever hands them more $$

 

RealityCheck

Jul 15, 2009

Look, the economist is correct that raising the minimum wage will theoretically have a marginal impact on reducing jobs. But seriously, if she feels that way, why don't we just open the flood gates to immigrants and let people work for a buck an hour. That should make the conservatives happy! "first step on the career ladder" is mostly bs. permanent wage-slave is more accurate for most people.

 

Commonsense

Jul 15, 2009

2010 can't come soon enough!

 

simon low

Jul 15, 2009

make all of america at bare minimum wage, then all fed, city, and state budgets will balance like a high wire act.

 

rmsnowco

Jul 16, 2009

How is a agreement entered by fully consenting adults any of the states business?

 

j

Jul 16, 2009

RE---RealityCheck
Jul 15, 2009 "That should make the conservatives happy! "

Conservatives are the ones fighting illegal immigration. Sheesh you are stupid.

 

Misha Patrovick

Oct 6, 2009

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