Here's what a higher minimum wage really does to job growth

I’ve been seeing all kinds of blather lately that increasing pay — particularly a higher minimum wage — is killing job growth. Meaning that because employers have to pay more in salaries, they aren’t hiring, or are even firing workers.

My response to that?

Please.

In fact, what we’ve seen lately in the job market should finally put that old canard — higher pay leads to job losses — to rest.

Fact One: The effective minimum wage (I’ll spell this out below) has been soaring recently and is at an all-time high.

Fact Two: At 3.5%, the U.S. unemployment rate hasn’t been this low since December 1969, almost exactly half a century ago. Nixon was in the White House, Neil Armstrong was on the moon, and the hippies were at Woodstock. A long time ago.

Striking McDonalds workers demanding a $15 minimum wage demonstrate in Las Vegas, Nevada U.S., June 14, 2019. REUTERS/Mike Segar
Striking McDonalds workers demanding a $15 minimum wage demonstrate in Las Vegas, Nevada U.S., June 14, 2019. REUTERS/Mike Segar

That’s pretty much it, case closed, except for another fact. That is, I think employers, business owners, and CEOs sometimes use higher wages, particularly those mandated by the government (i.e. minimum wage hikes), as an excuse or cover for weak performance by their businesses — and/or for other reasons.

Further, if you see a business predicated on paying workers the current federal minimum wage of $7.25, you have to ask yourself what kind of a life is that company providing for its employees.

I’ll tell you what kind of life.

That $7.25 an hour works out to be $15,080 a year. Federal guidelines mandate that a salary of $21,330 or below for a family of three is at poverty level and is eligible for certain federal programs including the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, formerly known as food stamps. (Ok, sure, for an individual the poverty level is a salary of $12,490. Still.)

I’m not saying that pay hikes aren’t real money for an employer, particularly for a small business owner with a few employees. But the federal minimum wage hasn’t been raised since July 2009. If you haven’t factored in giving your workers a raise in, what, 123 months, I would submit you aren’t so hot in the planning department.

Or you’re taking advantage.

Credit: David Foster/Yahoo Finance
Credit: David Foster/Yahoo Finance

So if the federal minimum wage is $7.25, what do I mean by the effective minimum wage and why has that been climbing? First, understand that the federal minimum wage is binding only in 21 states, mostly in southern and western states. The other 29 have state minimum wages, all higher than the federal bar, and now some cities like New York City and Seattle are raising the bar, as well.

According to The New York Times, if you average all these minimums across the country, you get an effective national minimum wage of $11.80. That’s the number that I said has soared over the past decade — just as the unemployment rate was plummeting — and is at an all-time high.