Yesterday the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) released it analysis of
options for increasing the federal minimum wage — most notably the $15
minimum wage that has been the focus of the “Fight for $15” movement and
embodied in the Raise the
Wage legislation passed out of the House Committee on
Education and Labor. (CBO also looked at $10 and $12 options. I will leave
those results for the reader to analyze.)
Specifically: “The first option [considered by CBO] would raise the federal
minimum wage to $15 per hour as of January 1, 2025. That increase would be
implemented in six annual increments starting on January 1, 2020. After
reaching $15 in 2025, the minimum wage would be indexed, or tied, to
median hourly wages. The $15 option would also gradually eliminate
exceptions to the minimum wage for tipped workers, teenage workers, and
disabled workers.” It is worth noting (see Figure 4) that the proposal is
by far an outlier (compared to both past and proposed hikes) in both the
percentage increase in wages of directly affected workers (above 20
percent) and the fraction of workers affected (about 13 percent).
The basic mechanisms in play are by now well
understood. The rising minimum wage will increase pay for
those minimum-wage workers who remain employed, as well as for those who
would likely see a raise to keep the pay scales in the right order. These
pay hikes will come at the expense of those workers who will not be
employed, the profits of businesses, and the higher prices that consumers
must pay. In CBO’s words:
- Real earnings for workers
while they remained employed would increase by $64 billion,
- Real earnings for workers
while they were jobless would decrease by $20 billion,
- Real income for business
owners would decrease by $14 billion, and
- Real income for consumers
would decrease by $39 billion.
Of course there are lots of uncertainties inherent in the
analysis. CBO highlights two: the kind of wage growth that might occur
before the proposal took effect, and the lack of unanimity in the research
literature on the effects of minimum wage increases. I concur. But I would
add that we also do not know what will be the state of the economy in 2025;
raising the minimum wage in a recession could be dramatically more
damaging.
Stepping back from the details, what does the CBO report contribute? It
reminds us that raising the minimum wage:
- Destroys jobs — 1.3 million
jobs is the median estimate of job loss;
- It is not a stimulus to
economic growth — CBO estimates that total income is smaller than it
would be in the absence of a minimum wage hike;
- It is not an anti-poverty
program — some 40 percent of low-wage workers are in families with
income three times the poverty level or more (see Figure 6 in the
report); and
- On balance, it is a bad
idea.
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