The U.S. has one of the stingiest minimum wage policies of any wealthy nation

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By Christopher Ingraham December 29 at 11:11 AM


Minimum wage workers in 18 states will see larger paychecks starting Jan. 1, according to the Economic Policy Institute, thanks primarily to minimum wage increases approved by either voters or state legislatures.

Maine's minimum wage workers will get the biggest pay raise, an 11 percent increase from $9 an hour to $10 an hour, as part of a ballot measure approved by the state's voters in 2016.

Minimum wage employees will get a 90 cent hourly increase in Colorado, while those in Hawaii will see an extra 85 cents. The minimum wage in Washington state will increase to $11.50 an hour, making it the highest of any state.

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Voters and liberal politicians in many states have made minimum wage increases a priority in recent years, a response in part to growing income inequality and stagnant wages across much of the income spectrum.

At the federal level, the minimum wage hasn't been raised since 2009, when it was set to $7.25. In inflation-adjusted terms, the federal minimum wage was highest in 1968, when it was equal to $11.18 in today's dollars.

just six states had minimum wages that were higher than the federal minimum wage that year. By 2017, 29 states, plus the District of Columbia, had set minimum wages above the federal level.

Among the world's wealthy nations, the United States is an outlier on this issue: Americans have the lowest national minimum wage, relative to the median wage, of any of the wealthy nations represented in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.

In France, for instance, the national minimum wage (close to 1,500 euros per month) is equal to about 61 percent of the medium national median wage. In Australia it's 54 percent. In Canada it's 46 percent.

In the United States, by contrast, the federal minimum wage works out to just 35 percent of the national median wage, the lowest in the OECD.

median.jpg



The Economic Policy Institute's David Cooper has argued that the international comparison above demonstrates there's plenty of room for Congress to raise the U.S. minimum wage. Raising the minimum wage to $12 by 2020, for instance, would put the U.S. minimum wage at 54 percent of the median income and closer to the middle of the chart, near Australia. It would also set the real purchasing power of the minimum wage to just a hair higher than its level in 1968.

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Many conservative economists, like the American Enterprise Institute's Mark Perry, are skeptical of the value of minimum wage hikes. They argue that the costs of increased minimum wages are borne by employers, who may be forced to respond by either increasing prices for consumers or hiring fewer workers overall. The money has to come from somewhere.

Studies have generally found that modest minimum wage hikes lead to increases in consumer costs, but not reductions in employment. A massive 2014 review of over 200 minimum wage studies concluded that “moderate increases in the minimum wage are a useful means of raising wages in the lower part of the wage distribution that has little or no effect on employment and hours.”

It cautioned, however, that large minimum wage hikes could have different impacts, but we don't know for sure: “Evidence for the United States is lacking because there have not been large increases in the last generation.”

A 2016 YouGov survey found that 66 percent of Americans, including 55 percent of Republicans, supported raising the minimum wage to $10.10 an hour.


Analysis | The U.S. has one of the stingiest minimum wage policies of any wealthy nation
 

Anhur

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Why wouldn't it?

You can't be the reserve currency of the world AND not be fiscally conservative

Comes with the territory.
They have enough money to have 900+ military bases that cost 100 billion each year but don't have enough to increase the minimum wage? They also wasted 1.5 TRILLION on a fighter jet that can barely fly but citizens can't have free healthcare or free education? America's infrastructure gets a grade of D and the people of Flint don't even have access to clean water. This just proves how corrupt the system is.
 
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☑︎#VoteDemocrat

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They have enough money to have 900+ military bases that cost 100 billion each but don't have enough to increase the minimum wage? They also wasted 1.5 TRILLION on a plane that can barely fly but citizens can't have free healthcare or free education? America's infrastructure gets a grade of D and the people of Flint don't even have access to clean water. This just proves how corrupt the system is.
Financial policy is often about social control and incentive.

Look at tax policies for families and stipulations for welfare.
 

Anhur

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Financial policy is often about social control and incentive.

Look at tax policies for families and stipulations for welfare.
Well if this "financial policy" continues out of frustration the people might start a revolution. This is why America needs people like Bernie who will bring back some order to the country.
 

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I would pay good money for the opportunity to kick your teeth down your throat.
Why so violent?

I'm explaining the ways of the world to you.

This is why I don't respect a lot of you peasants.

The US financial system, as essentially the foundation of world finance, has an obligation to provide a degree of stability globally, which affects even domestic fiscal policy and labor relations.

Theres a reason Europeans appear to have such an attractive system...and a lot of it has to do with: Demographics, Post-WW2 development, and a lot of other factors you all neglect to understand about other countries.

Theres 300 million Americans. You're comparing us to nations with at most 1/3rd of the population in economic unions like the EU.

Things are way different.
 

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Well if this "financial policy" continues out of frustration the people might start a revolution. This is why America needs people like Bernie who will bring back some order to the country.
Bernie is not even the best representative of what he claims to represent. He's a terrible policy representative and an overall charlatan.

There are better and smarter policy proposals that are more responsible and eloquent than the "kill the bankers" bullshyt.

That being said, you're just resorting to poorly defended populist rhetoric.

Minimum wage floors won't "cause revolutions"

You're not supposed to make the MW. Only 2% of workers make that wage.
 

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Why so violent?

I'm explaining the ways of the world to you.

This is why I don't respect a lot of you peasants.

The US financial system, as essentially the foundation of world finance, has an obligation to provide a degree of stability globally, which affects even domestic fiscal policy and labor relations.

Theres a reason Europeans appear to have such an attractive system...and a lot of it has to do with: Demographics, Post-WW2 development, and a lot of other factors you all neglect to understand about other countries.

Theres 300 million Americans. You're comparing us to nations with at most 1/3rd of the population in economic unions like the EU.

Things are way different.

Sound like a Trump supporter with the "peasant" talk. :sas2:
 

Anhur

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The US financial system, as essentially the foundation of world finance, has an obligation to provide a degree of stability globally, which affects even domestic fiscal policy and labor relations.

Theres a reason Europeans appear to have such an attractive system...and a lot of it has to do with: Demographics, Post-WW2 development, and a lot of other factors you all neglect to understand about other countries.

Theres 300 million Americans. You're comparing us to nations with at most 1/3rd of the population in economic unions like the EU.

Things are way different.
Studies have proven that America would save money if they introduced a single-payer healthcare system. Free and cheaper education will allow many more people who previously didn't have resources to obtain an education which will allow them to contribute to the economy.
 

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Sound like a Trump supporter with the "peasant" talk. :sas2:
Whatever. I legit think I'm better than a lot of yall when it comes to this FAR, FAR left economic talk.

I'll accept that that I'm a center-left person on economics. The math has gotta add up to me. I can't support just emotional economic policy like that.

And this doesn't address the fact I think the government should restrict aspects of military, etc. I get that.

We can talk about spending and all that, but the minimum wage debate is incredibly disingenuous on many levels and I think it hurts more people than they realize.
 
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