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212 IRET Congressional Advisory 1 (2006)

handle is hein.taxfoundation/iretcgadv0209 and id is 1 raw text is: INSTITUTE FOR RESEARCH ON THE ECONOMICS OF TAXATION
IRET is a non-profit 501 (c)(3) economic policy research and educational organization devoted to informing
the public about policies thait will promote growth and efficient operation of the market economy.

November 1, 2006

Advisory No. 212

MINIMUM WAGE = MINIMUM EMPLOYMENT

On November 7, voters in Arizona, Missouri,
Montana, Nevada, and Wyoming will be asked to
approve increases in their state minimum wages and
to index them to inflation in the future. Some
proponents of the minimum wage mean well, but do
not recognize the damage it causes. Others know
full well what such wage floors do, and manipulate
voters' heartstrings to further their own ends.
According to the Labor Department, as of 2004,
less than 3 percent of hourly wage workers were
paid at or below the federal minimum wage of
$5.15 an hour; about half of them are under age 25,
and about a quarter are teenagers. Less than 2
percent of workers 25 or older get the minimum or
less. About 60% of these low-wage workers were
in the leisure and hospitality industry, primarily food
services and drinking places, where wages are
supplemented by tips. Part-time workers were seven
times more likely to be at or below the federal
minimum wage than full-time workers. Most move
up rapidly.
In many areas, low-end market wages are well
above the federal minimum, and the federal floor
has little or no impact. However, many states set
higher floors.  Wherever a minimum   wage is
binding, it prices the lowest-skilled, least-educated
job seekers out of the market. Job seekers who
cannot add value at least equal to the minimum
wage are not hired. Current workers whose output
barely exceeds the current federal or state minimum
face lay-offs whenever the minimum wage is raised.
Linking the wage to inflation would lock in the
damage.

Most job seekers made unemployable by the
minimum wage are teenagers from prosperous
families just trying to earn a little pocket money, or
are older, secondary workers living in households
with other breadwinners that are well above the
poverty level. They can bear the government-
mandated disappointment (although they should not
have to).
Nonetheless, some minimum wage recipients
are people who need work to help support
themselves and their families, perhaps with help
from food stamps or Medicaid. They are often
victims of ineffective school systems, and are
desperate for on-the-job training to make up for
their lack of skills. Even low paid jobs offer work
experience that allows workers either to advance on
site or to compete more successfully for jobs
elsewhere. The minimum wage closes that road to
advancement by making it uneconomical for
businesses to hire and train them.
Yes, it is awful that some people drop out of
school, or graduate without the skills needed to earn
more. And yes, we need to improve education in
public schools, and to let parents switch their
children from failing schools to ones that perform
better.  Meanwhile, there is no excuse for
prohibiting people from trading some of their time
at a lower wage for the on-the-job training that
could make up for their lack of education.
Those who favor the minimum wage should
consider in whose footsteps they follow.

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