A better way to raise the minimum wage

Democrats are having a big fight among themselves about how to raise the federal minimum wage, which has been stuck at $7.25 per hour since 2009. Sen. Bernie Sanders (I., Vt.) and some other liberals want it raised to $15 per hour, but conservative Democrats like Sen. Joe Manchin (D., W.V.) say that’s too high for rural areas and smaller cities. They might raise it to $11, which the Sanders camp considers dismissively low.

Why not have it both ways? A 2019 Democratic proposal would establish five minimum-wage tiers for different areas of the country, based on regional living costs. Within five years, the minimum wage in the costliest cities would rise to around $15, which is Sanders’ goal. In medium-cost areas, it would rise to about $13, while in the lowest-cost places the minimum would hit $11.50.

“The reason to do it regionally is anything that’s one-size-fits-all nationally doesn’t fit all these regional labor markets,” says Douglas Holtz-Eakin, president of the center-right think tank, American Action Forum. “I might start by going to northwest Arkansas and figuring out what doesn’t blow up the labor market there. I’d err on the side of those people.”

David Foster/Yahoo Finance
David Foster/Yahoo Finance

The problem with a $15 minimum wage everywhere is that it might be fine in big coastal cities like New York and San Francisco, but it would heavily burden employers in the south and Midwest and rural areas that could barely stand to pay that much. As wages go up, employers have stronger incentives to cut back on workers and invest in labor-saving technology. A January Congressional Budget Office analysis found that a nationwide $15 minimum wage would lift 900,000 people out of poverty, while also killing 1.4 million jobs.

Those lost jobs would be most acute in rural areas where people already feel neglected by Washington. “To the extent you’re going to have potentially negative employment effects, you’re really hurting rural areas,” says Clete Coughlin, emeritus economist at the St. Louis Federal Reserve Bank. “It makes sense to do tiers.”

Regional costs vary widely

A tiered system with regional variations might appease politicians like Manchin who represent low-cost-of-living parts of the country. Government data, for instance, shows that living costs in San Francisco, the most expensive U.S. city, are 57% higher than in Beckley, W.V., the lowest-cost metro area. The biggest difference in regional costs is typically housing, which costs more than four times as much in San Francisco as in Beckley. Economically, it doesn’t make sense for businesses in each place to pay the same minimum wage. San Francisco, in fact, wouldn’t even be affected by a $15 federal minimum because it already has a minimum wage of $16.07.