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Take a Stand: Minimum wage is too low

LJWorld.com

Take a Stand: Minimum wage is too low

By Graham Kreicker

Lawrence Journal World (KS), April 27, 2008

The April 1 Journal-World carried a column by Kansas University business professor Mark Hirschey called “Inconvenient truth about minimum wage.” Since it was April Fools’ Day and the article gave many anecdotes but few “facts,” we’re not certain it was altogether serious. In case it was, we’re responding with some facts of our own.

Henry Ford had the novel idea that anyone building his cars should be able to afford to buy one. But most employers never bought this idea, and the period after Ford’s death was wracked by some of the worst labor strife in our history. Since those early days, every time a minimum wage has been implemented or increased, businessmen have screamed that the sky was falling. But the sky hasn’t fallen.

Here are 10 historical facts about minimum wages:

1. We had no minimum wage law until the Fair Labor Standards Act passed in 1938.

2. Since then, in terms of actual buying power, the value of the minimum wage peaked in 1968 — when it was just $1.58 per hour! Last year, according to the U.S. census, an equivalent minimum wage, in constant dollars, would have been $9.47.

3. Thanks in part to the minimum wage law, the American working class turned into a giant “middle class.” For many years, this middle class enjoyed relative prosperity and could afford to buy products from the very businesses that had worried so much about minimum wage laws — and which now profited from them!

4. Minimum wage laws don’t cause job loss. More than half the states have minimum wage rates that exceed the federal level, and none have suffered job loss as a result.

5. The growth in productivity of American workers has always outstripped any increases in wages and benefits.

6. Corporate earnings and profits have soared during the minimum wage era. Over 10-year, 25-year, and 50-year periods, the best place to invest has been the stock market. Minimum wages clearly do not hold back corporate growth and profits.

7. Over the same period, pay for corporate CEOs has soared to obscene levels — nearly 500 times the average wage — even when companies they “led” fell into bankruptcy.

8. The economic expansion that ended a few months ago was the first in our history that saw an actual decline in median income. Workers are suffering!

9. The Kansas minimum wage is $2.65 for firms not covered by the federal law. That means that today 17,000 Kansans earn less than the federal minimum wage! Does that mean that our state legislature wants workers who are employed full-time to earn under half of what it would take to rise to the federal poverty line?

10. In economic development, Kansas ranks near the bottom. States with much higher state minimum wages have zoomed past us in terms of economic growth. Our lowest-in-the-nation minimum wage law is a joke — but sadly, the joke is on us.

These are the actual facts about minimum and maximum wages.

Hirschey reminisced about the great low-wage jobs he held as a kid. State law now prohibits kids from working in many of those jobs — but, ironically, allows parents who are trying to raise kids to work the same kinds of jobs, for pennies.

Arguments against making the minimum wage a living wage are based on the faulty claim that it will hurt corporate profits and result in higher unemployment. But history shows that dividing the pie more equitably will neither bankrupt corporations nor cost us jobs. It will, rather, improve life for all employees and their families.

Graham Kreicker, a Lawrence resident, wrote this column on behalf of the Grassroots Action board.

Originally published at: http://www2.ljworld.com/news/2008/apr/27/take_stand_minimum_wage_too_low/

Recent press on minimum wage

Some Kansas press this week on the minimum wage, good and bad.

Good:

State Republicans Vote to Exploit Minimum Wage Workers,” Iola Register, by the editor and publisher, Emerson Lynn Jr.

More good:

Letter: “Fair wage helps all,” Topeka Capital-Journal, by Claude Lee, a retired judge from the Kansas Department of Labor

Bad:

Inconvenient truth about minimum wage,” Lawrence Journal-World, by Mark Hirschey, professor of business at the University of Kansas

RTW in the news again! (and related stories)

See below today’s (Oct. 19) story in the Wichita Eagle:
“Minimum wage may turn into city issue”

Below that, see related story, “Kansans make more than Oklahoma, Nebraska peers” (Oct. 18)
The many comments posted to the online version take issue with the claim stated in its title.

Minimum wage may turn into city issue

BY DAN VOORHIS
The Wichita Eagle

A coalition of labor and community groups has gathered more than 1,300 signatures in an attempt to create a Wichita minimum wage.They will present the petition to the Wichita City Council at some point in the future in hopes it will pass an ordinance mandating a wage to match the federal minimum wage. Continue reading ‘RTW in the news again! (and related stories)’

Lowest paying jobs have highest rates of depression

Not so shocking, I suppose. See article below from today’s (Oct. 15) Wichita Eagle. It is interesting to note that the jobs associated with the highest rates of depression are also the jobs that pay sub-federal minimum wage in Kansas (below $5.85 an hour): childcare workers, companions for the elderly and food service workers. http://www.kansas.com/509/story/200921.html

Report ranks jobs by rates of depression

By KEVIN FREKING
Associated Press Writer

- People who tend to the elderly, change diapers and serve up food and drinks have the highest rates of depression among U.S. workers.

Overall, 7 percent of full-time workers battled depression in the past year, according to a government report available Saturday.

Women were more likely than men to have had a major bout of depression, and younger workers had higher rates of depression than their older colleagues.

Almost 11 percent of personal care workers - which includes child care and helping the elderly and severely disabled with their daily needs - reported depression lasting two weeks or longer. Continue reading ‘Lowest paying jobs have highest rates of depression’

Media Coverage

Pre-Labor Day coverage:

* Wichita Business Journal

* Manhattan Mercury

Labor Day coverage:

* Kansas City Star

* Topeka Capital-Journal

* The Hays Daily News

* KAKE-TV 10 (ABC) in Wichita

* Eyewitness News 12 (CBS) in Wichita (with video)

* Kansas Public Radio 91.5

* WIBW 13,

* Kansas State Collegian

Op-ed in today’s (8/17/07) Topeka Capital-Journal: “Pay CEO’s less, minimum wage workers more”

By Holly Sklar
MinutemanMedia.org
Published Friday, August 17, 2007

Minimum wage workers made $5.15 an hour when Harry Potter became a sensation a decade ago, and nothing more until July 24, three days after the final Harry Potter release. The same year Harry Potter and the $5.15 minimum wage made their debuts, 1997, Business Week declared it was “Out of Control.” Since then, CEO pay has gotten more out of control. Average CEO pay at the top 500 companies jumped 38 percent to $15.2 million in 2006 — the year we broke the record for the longest period ever without a raise in the federal minimum wage.

The July 24 minimum wage increase from $5.15 to $5.85 is so little, so late, that the minimum wage is still worth less than it was back in 1997, when it was $6.67 in today’s dollars. Minimum wage workers had more buying power when Wal-Mart founder Sam Walton opened his first Walton’s 5 & 10 in 1951. CEOs make more in 90 minutes than minimum wage workers make in a year.

The two longest periods in history without a minimum wage increase have occurred since 1980. Those long draughts without a raise have left minimum wage workers in the dust.

In 1980, the average CEO at a big corporation made as much as 97 minimum wage workers. In 1997, the average CEO made as much as 728 minimum wage workers. Last year, CEOs made as much as 1,419 minimum wage workers.

“As the productivity of workers increases, one would expect worker compensation to experience similar gains,” a 2001 U.S. Department of Labor report observed. Instead, the gains have gone to record-breaking profits, CEOs and other have-mores. Between 1980 and 2006, worker productivity went up 70 percent, average worker wages went nowhere, the minimum wage fell 32 percent, and domestic corporate profits rose 256 percent, adjusting for inflation. A red light for minimum wage was a green light for accelerating greed. Adjusting for inflation, men in their thirties make less today than their fathers’ generation made in the 1970s.

It’s time to stop overpaying CEOs enough to keep their families rich for many generations to come at the expense of workers paid poverty wages today.

Even the state with the highest minimum wage, Washington at $7.93, doesn’t match the buying power of the federal minimum wage at its peak in 1968. Worth $9.56 in today’s dollars, the 1968 minimum wage was more than $2 higher than the scheduled raise in the federal minimum wage to $7.25 on July 24, 2009.

Too bad we can’t use Hermione’s magical Time-Turner to send the minimum wage and CEO pay both back to 1968.

The minimum wage sets the wage floor. If the minimum wage had stayed above $9, Wal-Mart and McDonald’s, our nation’s largest employers, couldn’t routinely pay wages much lower. Wal-Mart’s wages would be closer to Costco, which pays starting wages over $10 an hour. Costco CEO Jim Sinegal has long asserted, “Paying your employees well is not only the right thing to do, but it makes for good business.” McDonald’s starting wages would be more like In-N-Out Burger, which has a minimum wage of $9.50 an hour and has long ranked first or tied for first nationwide among fast food chains in overall excellence. Our nation’s minimum wage would be closer to Harry Potter’s U.K., where the minimum wage already tops $10, child poverty rates have fallen sharply, and the economy is stronger than ours.

Overpaying CEOs and underpaying workers is bad for business. Studies show that showering stock options on chief executives lowers shareholder returns, and increases the likelihood companies will cook their books, default on debt and go bankrupt. Higher worker wages benefit business by increasing consumer spending, reducing costly employee turnover, raising worker morale and productivity, and improving product quality and company reputation.

In the words of Gary Theilen, owner of Theilen Farm and Cattle in Enid, Okla., “As a small-business owner who has always paid well above the minimum wage, it has been my experience that paying living wages makes good business sense. It is good for business, workers and the community.”

Theilen has joined business owners from across the nation in endorsing higher minimum wage at Business for a Fair Minimum Wage (www.businessforafairminimumwage.org). Paying workers enough to live on is the minimum employers should do.

Holly Sklar is co-author of “A Just Minimum Wage: Good for Workers, Business and Our Future” and “Raise the Floor: Wages and Policies That Work for All of Us.” — holly@businessforsharedprosperity.org

Copyright 2007 Holly Sklar

http://www.cjonline.com/stories/081707/opi_192143188.shtml