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Thursday, January 19, 2006
Alan Reynolds :: Townhall.com Columnist
Below the minimum wage
by Alan Reynolds
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"What Is a Living Wage?" Jon Gertner's overstuffed cover story in The New York Times Magazine, offers a guess that, "Probably only around 3 percent of those in the workforce are actually paid $5.15 an hour or less." The last two words -- "or less" -- are absolutely critical, yet totally ignored as usual.

 The Internet leaves no excuse for guessing about what is "probably" true. Just type "Statistical Abstract" into Google, and then click on Section 12, Table 636: "Workers Paid Hourly Rates."

 Table 636 reveals that only 520,000 were paid the $5.15 federal minimum wage in 2004. That was merely four-tenths of one percent (0.4 percent) of total non-farm civilian employment -- far short of Gertner's 3 percent adventure in probability. Nearly three times as many U.S. workers (1,483,000) were paid less than the minimum wage. Among full-time workers, only 177,000 earned the $5.15 minimum wage in 2004, while 3.3 times as many (583,000) earned less than $5.15. As I mentioned, the words "or less" after $5.15 are there for a reason.

 Whenever the minimum wage has been increased, the most obvious result was an increase in the number earning less than the minimum.

 If we ignore the 45 percent of full-time U.S. employees who earn salaries rather than wages, it might almost be true that "around 3 percent" of those paid by the hour are actually paid $5.15 an hour or less. But that is only because 2 percent of those paid by the hour earn less than $5.15 an hour. And that raises an obvious question: How on earth is an increase in the minimum wage supposed to help the nearly 1.5 million people who are not earning that much in the first place?

 Gertner was handicapped in answering that question by his choice of sources. He lauds David Card and Alan Krueger, who managed to write an entire book about the minimum wage without even noticing 1.5 million people earning less than the minimum wage. Gertner even quotes Robert Pollin, whose appalling book, "The Living Wage," claimed, "Only 8.9 percent of the workforce actually earns the minimum wage." Either these experts are unaware of the Statistical Abstract, or they think facts are just a moral issue.

 When the minimum wage was last increased in 1997, the number of workers earning less than the minimum jumped to 3 million. The percentage of teens working for less than the minimum rose from 7.2 percent to 19.8 percent (it was 4.6 percent in 2004).

 I plowed this abandoned field once before in a July 2004 column, "When More Is Less," which is still at cato.org under my bio. "Any employer with an annual income below $500,000 is free to ignore the minimum wage," I explained. "The federal minimum wage does not apply to workers on small farms or at seasonal amusement or recreational facilities. It does not apply to newspaper deliverers, companions for the elderly, outside salesmen, U.S. seamen on foreign-flagged ships, switchboard operators or part-time babysitters." Such handy loopholes aside, there is sure to be some outright evasion of any minimum-wage law, since it is impossible to monitor all the casual day labor and home care going on.

 Gertner's minimum wage story is local, rather then national, but the issues are the same. He offers the unusual example of Santa Fe, N.M., a town of "wealthy retirees and ... movie stars," where "the tight labor market has pushed up wages so that many entry-level workers were already earning more than $8 an hour." We're not talking about some sleepy little village in Mississippi or Montana. Continued...

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Wages big problem, but MW not answer
If you're looking for answers about how to solve the low-wage problem, you need to understand its underlying dynamics.

The source is a 125 y/o book called Progress and Poverty. I'm guessing that many more people can associate those two words than can describe what the book says. But those who read it will see the problem of low wages through an entirely new set of lenses, and will know how to go about solving the problem.

None of the solutions that are currently being discussed will even touch the problem of low wages. But the good news is that when we solve it, we will also solve the problems of housing affordability, opportunity for entrepreneurs, and urban sprawl -- in one fell swoop, if you will.


I challenge you to find the book and read it. There is a new abridgement out for those who prefer the short version in contemporary language. But for classicists and those who want to fully understand, the unabridged is peerless.

A brief synopsis is at http://www.wealthandwant.com/HG/PP/Katzenberger_synopsis.html.

At http://www.wealthandwant.com/, you'll find other ways to understand the solutions. Unless, of course, you think things are just fine now, and will continue to be fine for your children, your grandchildren, and all our children.

How much do your young adult children need to live on? How much do your young adult grandchildren need, in order to raise their children suitably?
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