Minimum wage increase overdue: Help for lowest-paid workers won't put burden on businesses that employ them
Atlanta Journal Constitution Editorial, 11/12/06

Enlightened self-interest seized hold of voters in six states last week. Ohio, Missouri, Montana, Colorado, Nevada and Arizona overwhelmingly approved higher minimum wages for their residents.

The margins of passage suggest those voters had no trouble determining the 9-year-old federal standard of $5.15 an hour is obsolete and that it consigns many adult workers to permanent poverty.

Just as obvious was the fact that poorly paid workers can become a burden on taxpayers: A minimum-wage employee struggling to put food on the table and a roof over her family's head is going to have a hard time paying an emergency room bill.

Now it's up to Congress to extend that common sense to states — including Georgia — that have resisted raising their own wage standards. In Georgia, the excuse for opposing a higher minimum wage has been a desire to create "a pro-business climate."

There's now a solution for that type of shortsighted intransigence. The Democrats who won control last week of the U.S. House and the Senate are in a position to increase the federal minimum wage for the first time since 1997. (They've set a target of $7.25 an hour.) The higher of either the federal or state minimum applies, so a national increase would push up wages in Georgia and a score of other states where the pay standard is behind the times.

Even President Bush appears receptive to an increase. On Wednesday, he said the minimum wage is a subject on which he and Democratic House Speaker-to be Nancy Pelosi should be able to "find common ground."

That's welcome news.

At the same time, the president made it clear he wants to protect small business against the cost of higher wages. Certainly that should be a factor in the deliberations. However, federal law already excuses businesses with less than $500,000 in annual revenue from paying the minimum, and provides other exemptions as well. State laws also shelter some businesses from the minimum.

However, while many of the obstacles to a higher minimum wage are falling, opponents will continue to argue that an increase would be counterproductive because higher wages would drive employers to hire fewer workers. But repeated studies in states that have raised their minimum wage provide scant evidence that happens, and at worst the impact appears minimal.

Last Tuesday, voters in six states apparently weighed that slight negative against the reality that the federal minimum is now worth little more than $4 because of inflation, a fact that proved a more compelling influence. The proposals approved Tuesday also protect low-wage workers against a future erosion of buying power. The new minimums in those states will be adjusted every year for inflation.

That's an issue Congress needs to address as well.

In Georgia, about 66,000 workers earn the minimum or less, according to the U.S. Labor Department. But thousands of others earn anywhere from a few pennies more than the minimum to just under the $7.25 wage Democrats are expected to pursue. More than 200,000 Georgians would be assured of a pay raise if the federal minimum were lifted to $7.25, according to the Economic Policy Institute, a Washington think tank.

Overall, three times that many workers would benefit from a minimum-wage increase because a domino effect would lead to pay hikes for better-paid employees, the institute suggests.

Rather than point to those numbers as a reason to oppose an increase, Georgia businesses should consider the example of Oregon. That state raised its minimum wage four years ago, and it's difficult to detect any fallout.

Oregon has the second-highest minimum wage in the country ($7.50 an hour, going to $7.80 in January). But employment growth remains healthy even in industries that rely on minimum-wage workers, The Wall Street Journal reported this month.

The higher minimum also has been good for business, according to Dan Gardner, who heads Oregon's Bureau of Labor and Industries. Instead of "saving for a Hawaiian vacation," as Gardner told the Journal, low-wage workers recycle their earnings into the economy.

"Minimum-wage workers," he told the newspaper, "are the only class of workers you can give a raise to and guarantee that they're going to spend the money and spend it in the local economy."

That, too, produces a pro-business climate.

POVERTY CHASM WIDENS

Full-time workers paid the federal minimum wage make about $10,300 a year. That hasn't changed since 1997, when the federal minimum was increased to $5.15 per hour. In contrast, the federal poverty guidelines used to determine eligibility for aid programs have risen every year.

Annual earnings Poverty guidelines
on minimum wage Single person Family of three

1997 $10,300 $7,890 $13,330
1998 $10,300 $8,050 $13,650
1999 $10,300 $8,240 $13,880
2000 $10,300 $8,350 $14,150
2001 $10,300 $8,590 $14,630
2002 $10,300 $8,860 $15,020
2003 $10,300 $8,980 $15,260
2004 $10,300 $9,310 $15,670
2005 $10,300 $9,570 $16,090
2006 $10,300 $9,800 $16,600

Source: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services

David McNaughton, for the editorial board (dmcnaughtonajc)
http://www.ajc.com/opinion/content/opinion/
stories/2006/11/11/edwage1112.html

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