States That Raised Their Minimum Wages Are Experiencing Faster Job Growth

Poitier

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States That Raised Their Minimum Wages Are Experiencing Faster Job Growth
BY BRYCE COVERT JULY 3, 2014 AT 11:53 AM UPDATED: JULY 3, 2014 AT 11:57 AM


AP824372984192-e1387374148566-638x280.jpg

CREDIT: AP

Think a higher minimum wage is a job killer? Think again: The states that raised their minimum wages on January 1 have seen higher employment growth since then than the states that kept theirs at the same rate.

The minimum wage went up in 13 states — Arizona, Connecticut, Colorado, Florida, Missouri, Montana, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, and Washington — either thanks to automatic increases in line with inflation or new legislation, as Ben Wolcott reports in his analysis at the Center for Economic and Policy Research. The average change in employment for those states over the first five months of the year as compared with the last five of 2013 is .99 percent, while the average for all remaining states is .68 percent.

Digging deeper, all but one of those states are experiencing increases in employment, and nine of them have seen growth above the median rate.



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CREDIT: CENTER FOR ECONOMIC AND POLICY RESEARCH





Wolcott’s analysis builds on a previous one from Goldman Sachs, which did the same evaluation for just January and compares it to December of last year. It found that the states that had minimum wage increases experienced faster job growth than those without a raise.

This doesn’t mean that increasing the minimum wage necessarily creates more jobs. “While this kind of simple exercise can’t establish causality, it does provide evidence against theoretical negative employment effects of minimum-wage increases,” Wolcott writes. Indeed, it adds to the evidence that higher minimum wages may not hurt job growth as much as some have warned. Washington has the highest minimum wage and saw the biggest increase in small business jobslast year. Its job growth has also remained steady and above average in the 15 years since it raised its wage. When economists studied state-level minimum wage increases over two decades they didn’t find any conclusive evidence that the raises impacted job creation.

That’s all good news for the ten states that have increased their minimum wages this year. Massachusetts went the furthest, raising its wage to $11 by 2017, but three — Hawaii, Maryland, and Connecticut — passed the $10.10 minimum wage being pushed at the federal level by Democrats and Vermont increased its wage to $10.50. And some cities have gone even further, with Seattle enacting a $15 minimum wage.

Progress in raising the entire country’s minimum wage has stalled, though. Republicans blocked a bill that would have increased it to $10.10 an hour.

http://thinkprogress.org/economy/2014/07/03/3456393/minimum-wage-state-increase-employment/
 

Brown_Pride

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"arguments dumb undergrads use"
:usure:
Even the article and the person who performed the study arrived at that conclusion.
This doesn’t mean that increasing the minimum wage necessarily creates more jobs. “While this kind of simple exercise can’t establish causality, it does provide evidence against theoretical negative employment effects of minimum-wage increases,” Wolcott writes.
 

Brown_Pride

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And? HL has an anti minimum-wage increase faction and this is yet another fail on the part of people like Dead7 and Domingo :mjlol:
only thing is i'm part of the PRO increase minimum wage faction so.....
Just saying this article, or rather the conclusions being drawn from the article, in spite of the analyst who's work the article is referencing flat out stating that there is no particular proof linking the results, is not the proof we're looking for...
 

☑︎#VoteDemocrat

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only thing is i'm part of the PRO increase minimum wage faction so.....
Just saying this article, or rather the conclusions being drawn from the article, in spite of the analyst who's work the article is referencing flat out stating that there is no particular proof linking the results, is not the proof we're looking for...
Precisely.

I'm pro minimum wage...but I'm not pro-jacking wages up on entry level unskilled labor for the fukk of it.
 

Domingo Halliburton

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And? HL has an anti minimum-wage increase faction and this is yet another fail on the part of people like Dead7 and Domingo :mjlol:

@Brown_Pride kind of answered for me already. But my point was more this guy is looking at it in a vacuum. There could be a million reasons why employment went up in those states. And I'm not against raising the minimum wage either.


Here's another undergrad argument to demonstrate causality: Every time they raise teacher salaries, alcohol sales go up. Does this mean all teachers are alcoholics?
 

Poitier

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@Brown_Pride kind of answered for me already. But my point was more this guy is looking at it in a vacuum. There could be a million reasons why employment went up in those states. And I'm not against raising the minimum wage either.


Here's another undergrad argument to demonstrate causality: Every time they raise teacher salaries, alcohol sales go up. Does this mean all teachers are alcoholics?

Depends on the correlation coefficient
 

boskey

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Precisely.

I'm pro minimum wage...but I'm not pro-jacking wages up on entry level unskilled labor for the fukk of it.

I am. Put money in the hands of people who will spend it and grow the economy. The only reason we don't do this is becuz it hurts the feelings of the "skilled labor" i.e. those of us who sit in air-conditioned offices and waste time on various websites all day long
 

☑︎#VoteDemocrat

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I am. Put money in the hands of people who will spend it and grow the economy. The only reason we don't do this is becuz it hurts the feelings of the "skilled labor" i.e. those of us who sit in air-conditioned offices and waste time on various websites all day long
artificial wage floors don't keep prices down
 

Consigliere

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I am. Put money in the hands of people who will spend it and grow the economy. The only reason we don't do this is becuz it hurts the feelings of the "skilled labor" i.e. those of us who sit in air-conditioned offices and waste time on various websites all day long

I think it has less to do with feelings and more to do with lack of desire to incentivize being unskilled. While the unskilled and lower class are more likely to spend their money than the rich, what are they spending it on? Is it creating jobs and if so what kind of jobs?
 
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