Aug 31, 2012
The federal minimum wage is just $7.25 an hour and hasn't been raised in three years. But a raise is much more overdue than that. If we look at the minimum wage 44 years ago, and simply adjust it for inflation, it would be more than $10 today.
This is another ugly symptom of what has gone wrong in America over the last 35 to 40 years. From 1979 to 2007, about 60 percent of the income gains have gone to the now infamous 1 percent at the top, with the majority of those gains going to the top 0.1 percent - people who made, on average, $5.6 million per year.
But some of the worst effects of giving more to those who have the most have affected people toward the bottom of the income ladder, and there is no excuse for it.
Productivity - the amount that a worker produces in an hour - has more than doubled over the last 44 years. When the minimum wage doesn't rise, or falls in terms of its purchasing power, it means that these millions of low-income workers are not sharing in the gains from improved technology, knowledge and organization.
There is currently legislation before Congress to raise the federal minimum wage from its current $7.25 an hour to $9.80, over three years. After that it would be indexed to inflation.
Contrary to prevailing myths about who would benefit from a proposed increase in the minimum wage, 88 percent of the 28 million workers affected are not teenagers.
As the Economic Policy Institute has shown, the majority are full-time workers, and on average they earn about half of their families' income. And 28 percent of the nation's 76 million children would have a parent who would benefit from the raise.
Another oversize myth promoted by the fast-food industry and other low-wage employers is that raising the minimum wage hurts workers by increasing unemployment. Although it is theoretically possible to raise minimum wages enough to cause employers to hire fewer workers, there is hardly any indication from economic research that the proposed increase in the minimum wage would have this effect.
Employment in the overall economy depends on aggregate demand or spending, which is determined - especially in our currently weak economy - by macroeconomic policy, including the Federal Reserve, and fiscal policy.
And raising the minimum wage doesn't only cut into profits, it also increases demand in the economy by moving income to workers who spend more than those who receive profit.
The EPI estimated that the proposed increase in the minimum wage would actually increase employment.
In Brazil, the minimum wage was raised by 60 percent in real terms by the country's most popular president, Lula da Silva - a former metal worker and union leader - as Brazil's economy moved toward record low levels of unemployment. Across South America, other governments including Argentina, Ecuador, Bolivia and Venezuela have significantly reduced inequality while increasing economic growth.
What a shame that the hemisphere's richest country, where it would be so much easier to lift-up the working poor, has moved in the opposite direction.
It means that the U.S. political system is actually more corrupt and less democratic in very important ways than those of our developing country neighbors to the south.
The vast majority of Americans would favor an increase in the minimum wage, as well as restoring the rights of labor to organize unions. But our financial elite have a veto over what we want to vote for, in large part because of our system of legalized bribery - aka, the financing of political candidates' elections.
Raising the minimum wage is about the minimum that we could do to reverse America's retreat from civilization at home.
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Mark Weisbrot
Mark Weisbrot is Co-Director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR), in Washington, DC. He is also president of Just Foreign Policy. His latest book is "Failed: What the "Experts" Got Wrong about the Global Economy" (2015). He is author of co-author, with Dean Baker, of "Social Security: The Phony Crisis" (2001).
The federal minimum wage is just $7.25 an hour and hasn't been raised in three years. But a raise is much more overdue than that. If we look at the minimum wage 44 years ago, and simply adjust it for inflation, it would be more than $10 today.
This is another ugly symptom of what has gone wrong in America over the last 35 to 40 years. From 1979 to 2007, about 60 percent of the income gains have gone to the now infamous 1 percent at the top, with the majority of those gains going to the top 0.1 percent - people who made, on average, $5.6 million per year.
But some of the worst effects of giving more to those who have the most have affected people toward the bottom of the income ladder, and there is no excuse for it.
Productivity - the amount that a worker produces in an hour - has more than doubled over the last 44 years. When the minimum wage doesn't rise, or falls in terms of its purchasing power, it means that these millions of low-income workers are not sharing in the gains from improved technology, knowledge and organization.
There is currently legislation before Congress to raise the federal minimum wage from its current $7.25 an hour to $9.80, over three years. After that it would be indexed to inflation.
Contrary to prevailing myths about who would benefit from a proposed increase in the minimum wage, 88 percent of the 28 million workers affected are not teenagers.
As the Economic Policy Institute has shown, the majority are full-time workers, and on average they earn about half of their families' income. And 28 percent of the nation's 76 million children would have a parent who would benefit from the raise.
Another oversize myth promoted by the fast-food industry and other low-wage employers is that raising the minimum wage hurts workers by increasing unemployment. Although it is theoretically possible to raise minimum wages enough to cause employers to hire fewer workers, there is hardly any indication from economic research that the proposed increase in the minimum wage would have this effect.
Employment in the overall economy depends on aggregate demand or spending, which is determined - especially in our currently weak economy - by macroeconomic policy, including the Federal Reserve, and fiscal policy.
And raising the minimum wage doesn't only cut into profits, it also increases demand in the economy by moving income to workers who spend more than those who receive profit.
The EPI estimated that the proposed increase in the minimum wage would actually increase employment.
In Brazil, the minimum wage was raised by 60 percent in real terms by the country's most popular president, Lula da Silva - a former metal worker and union leader - as Brazil's economy moved toward record low levels of unemployment. Across South America, other governments including Argentina, Ecuador, Bolivia and Venezuela have significantly reduced inequality while increasing economic growth.
What a shame that the hemisphere's richest country, where it would be so much easier to lift-up the working poor, has moved in the opposite direction.
It means that the U.S. political system is actually more corrupt and less democratic in very important ways than those of our developing country neighbors to the south.
The vast majority of Americans would favor an increase in the minimum wage, as well as restoring the rights of labor to organize unions. But our financial elite have a veto over what we want to vote for, in large part because of our system of legalized bribery - aka, the financing of political candidates' elections.
Raising the minimum wage is about the minimum that we could do to reverse America's retreat from civilization at home.
Mark Weisbrot
Mark Weisbrot is Co-Director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR), in Washington, DC. He is also president of Just Foreign Policy. His latest book is "Failed: What the "Experts" Got Wrong about the Global Economy" (2015). He is author of co-author, with Dean Baker, of "Social Security: The Phony Crisis" (2001).
The federal minimum wage is just $7.25 an hour and hasn't been raised in three years. But a raise is much more overdue than that. If we look at the minimum wage 44 years ago, and simply adjust it for inflation, it would be more than $10 today.
This is another ugly symptom of what has gone wrong in America over the last 35 to 40 years. From 1979 to 2007, about 60 percent of the income gains have gone to the now infamous 1 percent at the top, with the majority of those gains going to the top 0.1 percent - people who made, on average, $5.6 million per year.
But some of the worst effects of giving more to those who have the most have affected people toward the bottom of the income ladder, and there is no excuse for it.
Productivity - the amount that a worker produces in an hour - has more than doubled over the last 44 years. When the minimum wage doesn't rise, or falls in terms of its purchasing power, it means that these millions of low-income workers are not sharing in the gains from improved technology, knowledge and organization.
There is currently legislation before Congress to raise the federal minimum wage from its current $7.25 an hour to $9.80, over three years. After that it would be indexed to inflation.
Contrary to prevailing myths about who would benefit from a proposed increase in the minimum wage, 88 percent of the 28 million workers affected are not teenagers.
As the Economic Policy Institute has shown, the majority are full-time workers, and on average they earn about half of their families' income. And 28 percent of the nation's 76 million children would have a parent who would benefit from the raise.
Another oversize myth promoted by the fast-food industry and other low-wage employers is that raising the minimum wage hurts workers by increasing unemployment. Although it is theoretically possible to raise minimum wages enough to cause employers to hire fewer workers, there is hardly any indication from economic research that the proposed increase in the minimum wage would have this effect.
Employment in the overall economy depends on aggregate demand or spending, which is determined - especially in our currently weak economy - by macroeconomic policy, including the Federal Reserve, and fiscal policy.
And raising the minimum wage doesn't only cut into profits, it also increases demand in the economy by moving income to workers who spend more than those who receive profit.
The EPI estimated that the proposed increase in the minimum wage would actually increase employment.
In Brazil, the minimum wage was raised by 60 percent in real terms by the country's most popular president, Lula da Silva - a former metal worker and union leader - as Brazil's economy moved toward record low levels of unemployment. Across South America, other governments including Argentina, Ecuador, Bolivia and Venezuela have significantly reduced inequality while increasing economic growth.
What a shame that the hemisphere's richest country, where it would be so much easier to lift-up the working poor, has moved in the opposite direction.
It means that the U.S. political system is actually more corrupt and less democratic in very important ways than those of our developing country neighbors to the south.
The vast majority of Americans would favor an increase in the minimum wage, as well as restoring the rights of labor to organize unions. But our financial elite have a veto over what we want to vote for, in large part because of our system of legalized bribery - aka, the financing of political candidates' elections.
Raising the minimum wage is about the minimum that we could do to reverse America's retreat from civilization at home.
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