Why we should raise the minimum wage: Reich

Getty Images. The math doesn't add up for a GDP growth rate of 3.5 percent, former Labor Secretary Robert Reich says.

The city of Seattle, Washington, illustrates why the minimum wage could be raised to as much as $15 an hour. That's what Seattle did recently, leading a long-overdue movement toward a living wage.

Across America, the ranks of the working poor are growing. While low-paying industries such as retail and food preparation accounted for 22 percent of the jobs lost in the Great Recession, they've generated 44 percent of the jobs added since then, according to a report from the National Employment Law Project. Last February, the Congressional Budget Office estimated that raising the national minimum wage to $10.10 an hour from $7.25 would lift 900,000 people out of poverty.

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Seattle estimates that, before its historic decision, almost a fourth of its workers earned below $15 an hour. That translates into about $31,000 a year for a full-time worker. In a high-cost city like Seattle, that's barely enough to support a family. Most minimum-wage workers aren't teenagers these days. They're major breadwinners who need a higher minimum wage in order to keep their families out of poverty.

The gains from a higher minimum wage extend beyond those who receive it. More money in the pockets of low-wage workers means more sales, especially in the locales they live in - which, in turn, creates faster growth and more jobs. A major reason the current economic recovery is anemic is that so many Americans lack the purchasing power to get the economy moving again.

With a higher minimum wage, moreover, we'd all end up paying less for Medicaid, food stamps and other assistance the working poor now need in order to have a minimally decent standard of living.

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Some worry about job losses accompanying a higher minimum wage. I wouldn't advise any place to raise its minimum wage immediately to $15 an hour from the current federal minimum of $7.25. That would be too big a leap all at once. Employers - especially small ones - need time to adapt.

But this isn't what Seattle is doing. It's raising its minimum to $15 incrementally over several years from $9.32 (Washington State's current statewide minimum). Large employers (with over 500 workers) that don't offer employer-sponsored health insurance have three years to comply; those that offer health insurance have four; smaller employers, up to seven. (That may be too long a phase-in.)

My guess is Seattle's businesses will adapt without any net loss of employment. Seattle's employers will also have more employees to choose from - as the $15 an hour minimum attracts into the labor force some people who otherwise haven't been interested. That means they'll end up with workers who are highly reliable and likely to stay longer, resulting in real savings.

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Research by Michael Reich (no relation) and Arindrajit Dube confirms these results. They examined employment in several hundred pairs of adjacent counties lying on opposite sides of state borders, each with different minimum wages, and found no statistically significant increase in unemployment in the higher-minimum counties, even after four years. (Other researchers who found contrary results failed to control for counties where unemployment was already growing before the minimum wage was increased.) They also found that employee turnover was lower where the minimum was higher.

Not every city or state can meet the bar Seattle has just set. But many can - and should.

Commentary by Robert Reich, former U.S. Secretary of Labor under Bill Clinton. He is currently Chancellor's Professor of Public Policy at the University of California at Berkeley. He is also the author of 14 books, and co-creator of the documentary "Inequality for All."



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