another failure for Nancy
A new report is
detailing Nancy Pelosi and the socialist Democrats’ complete ineptitude when it
comes to delivering on one of their key campaign promises: raising the minimum
wage.
This latest failure fits with the long list of disastrous results for the
socialist Democrats who have spent their time on meaningless messaging bills, socialistfantasies and defending anti-Semitism rather than
accomplishing anything meaningful for voters.
In case you missed it…
Why Democrats can’t figure out how to raise the minimum wage
CNN
Zachary B. Wolf
May 19, 2019
https://www.cnn.com/2019/05/19/politics/federal-minimum-wage-increase/index.html
More than two months ago, House Democrats started the process of passing a bill
that would gradually raise the federal minimum wage to $15 per hour.
Since then? Crickets.
Here’s a look at the complex factors involved in making such a move.
Pelosi promised action in first 100 hours
It’s a far cry from Nancy Pelosi’s 2017 pledge that if
Democrats took control of the House “in the first 100 hours we will pass a
$15 minimum wage.”
Months later, House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer told reporters Democrats will
move to the bill. But they need more time.
“We’ll get the votes for the minimum wage bill, but there are discussions
about how we can, what actions, if any, should we take to make sure that it is
fair,” he said Thursday on Capitol Hill.
In addition to there being red states and blue states, it turns out there are
high-cost states and low-cost states. And a single minimum wage might not be
the thing to bind them.
Despite the rhetoric and promises in 2018 and the importance of economic
inequality as a Democratic issue on the 2020 campaign trail, the Democratic
Party is split.
Nearly everyone in the party wants to raise the minimum wage. But Democrats who
hail from states and districts where it’s not as expensive to live are not as
keen on that $15 figure. At least not right now.
It’s not clear at this point when or even if House Speaker Pelosi will move
toward the $15 minimum wage bill. (And even if she does, the bill faces a very
uncertain future in the Republican-controlled Senate). One alternative to a
blanket $15 federal minimum wage, being pushed by moderate Democrats like Rep.
Terri Sewell of Alabama, would calculate a minimum wage regionally.
The advantage, said Sewell in April, is that this proposal
“provides all minimum wage workers with a much-needed raise while
protecting jobs, giving every community the flexibility to grow their economy
and taking into account that the cost of living in Selma, Alabama is very
different than New York City.”
A decade of no wage hikes
It’s been 10 years since the federal minimum wage went up. The bill that passed
through committee earlier this year would raise the minimum hourly wage from
the current $7.25 to $15 over five years.
Thereafter, it would enable automatic annual hikes based on increases in the
median hourly wage as determined by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, an
important feature of the $15 wage bill — the Raise the Wage Act — that would make
another 10-year lull unlikely.
There was no federal minimum wage until 1938, and it’s been raised
periodically. But Congress hasn’t approved a new wage hike since 2007,
when President George W. Bush signed the current wage into law. The last hike
approved through that law went into effect in 2009.
$7.25 doesn’t go as far as it used to
The dollar isn’t worth what it once was, of course. It would take about $8.60
in 2019 to equal the buying power of $7.25 in 2009, according to one government inflation calculator.
The $15 value has been repeated by Democrats in Congress and some presidential
candidates like a mantra in recent years as they criticize corporations, saying
they’re undervaluing their employees. It’s a key way they contrast themselves
with Republicans, who have focused on helping corporations and businesses with
a permanent tax cut rather than workers with a guaranteed higher wage.
But there is some recent research on local minimum
wage hikes that challenges the long-held view that a higher minimum wage leads
to fewer total low-wage jobs. In today’s economy, with an unemployment rate
under 4%, fewer jobs might not be a problem anyway.
Even if Democrats can figure out how to pass a $15 minimum wage, that isn’t a
number that will wipe out poverty or even lead to a living wage — enough to
cover a worker’s expenses — everywhere in the country.
White House adviser calls a wage hike ‘silly’
While President Donald Trump was on both sides of this issue during his
campaign in 2016 and said certain states need much higher wages, his White
House has been cool to the idea of a minimum wage increase.
“My view is a federal minimum wage is a terrible idea. A terrible
idea,” Trump’s top economic adviser Larry Kudlow told The Washington Post in November. He
called the notion of a federal minimum wage hike “silly.”
Who makes minimum wage?
About 81.9 million workers over the age of 16 were paid by the hour in 2018.
And 1.7 million of those hourly workers, 2.1%, were paid at or below the
minimum wage, according to BLS. The percentage of men making
at or are at below the minimum wage is less, 2%, while the percentage of women
is a little higher, at 3%.
The data BLS uses is from a government surveyand relies on what
wage workers say they make, as opposed to what wage employers say they are
paying.
Workers making minimum wage tend to be young, according to BLS, and include a
slightly larger percentage of black workers than other racial subgroups. More
part-time workers reported making the minimum wage or less than full-time
workers. About 60% of the people who reported earning wages at or below the
minimum worked in the leisure and hospitality industry, predominantly in
restaurants, where their wages may be supplemented by tips.
Tipped workers can be paid less than the minimum wage, but the Raise the Wage
Act would end that disparity.
Cities, states and voters have moved on their own
There is already a regional minimum wage of sorts. States and cities have been
passing their own laws, to the point that more than half of the states — 29 —
have higher minimum wages than the federal government, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.
And more state hikes are on the way. Maryland lawmakers overrode the veto of
the state’s Republican governor to raise the minimum wage there to $15 by 2025. Vermonthas considered legislation that would
raise its minimum wage to $15 by 2024 and Connecticut‘s lawmakers are considering a bill
that would do the same by 2023.
Other legislatures see things differently. In Arkansas, voters overwhelmingly passed an initiative last November to raise that state’s
minimum wage to $11 by 2021 despite opposition from their
governor. Some state lawmakers are looking to gut the measure, although the
governor says it should stand.
Cost of living varies by region
This is an important regional aspect that helps explain the
position of Democrats like Sewell; workers in the South are more likely to be
paid hourly — 35% of workers there said they were, compared with less than 25%
in every other region of the country. And among those paid hourly, half of them
in the South — where there are almost no higher-than-federal minimum wage laws
— made at or below the federal minimum wage. Less than a quarter of hourly
workers in every other part of the country said they made at or less than thefederalminimum
wage. But again, there are many more higher-than-federal minimum wage laws in
those states.
Even those laws aren’t enough, according to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s living wage
calculator, which was created by professor Amy Glasmeier. Her data
suggests that different areas have different needs and so do different
families. So she took cost-of-living data for every city and county nationwide
and calculated what an individual needs to live. She also includes what
families of varying sizes need.
In Mississippi, where there is no state minimum wage, so the federal wage of
$7.25 is in effect, she calculates a living wage at just more than $11 per hour
for an individual.
$15 isn’t always enough
In Washington state, which includes super-expensive Seattle, the statewide
living wage is $13.30. The state’s minimum wage will kick up to just more than
that in January 2020, which is great for the state but wouldn’t be enough for
low-wage earners in Seattle, where the living wage for an individual is
calculated at $15.05. Seattle’s citywide minimum wage is just below that
at $15 per hour, although some big companies must pay $16 as part of the city
law.
San Francisco’s living wage is more than $18 for an individual and more than
$36 for an individual with a child. The minimum wage there, which is tied to
inflation and the Consumer Price Index, will rise to $15.59 in July. That’s a
lot more than you might need to live in parts of Mississippi or Alabama, but
maybe not enough in San Francisco.
Pressure has brought change to Amazon, McDonald’s
Some businesses also are moving on their own.
Amazon buckled to pressure from the likes of
Sen. Bernie Sanders to raise its minimum wage from around $11 for new employees
to $15.
“We listened to our critics, thought hard about what we wanted to do and
decided we want to lead,” said Jeff Bezos, Amazon’s founder and CEO.
“We’re excited about this change and encourage our competitors and other
large employers to join us.”
McDonald’s told the National Restaurant Association in
March that it would no longer be involved in any active
lobbying against minimum wage hikes.
Target has set a 2020 deadline to raise its lowest
wage to $15. It’s currently $12.
Companies are also having trouble filling jobs
“I think Target’s move is simply a reflection of the fact that we’re near
full employment and it is extremely difficult to get employees to work,”
former McDonald’s USA CEO Ed Rensi said on Fox Business in April.
“I had dinner with a bunch of McDonald’s franchisees the other night and
they are struggling to find employees at any price,” he added. “I see
some of them (offering) $16, $17 per hour, and they still can’t find
employees.”
However, small business owners might see things differently from a large chain
or even a franchise, Jon Kurrle, vice president of federal government relations
at the National Federation of Independent Business, told CNN in April.
“A larger company can absorb costs in a way that a smaller business can’t,
and also make technology investments in a way that not all small businesses
can,” he said.