Posted on 07/21/2014 9:27:34 AM PDT by Incorrigible
By Kevin McArdle July 21, 2014 5:14 AM
A new study by the Center for Economic and Research Policy shows that job growth in states that increased their minimum wages this year is far more robust when compared to states that did not hike the minimum wage.
Thirteen states increased their minimum wages in 2014, including New Jersey. According to the report, the average change in payrolls in states that implemented minimum wage hikes was 0.99 percent. For states that didnt see a minimum wage hike, it was 0.68 percent.
However, the report said there is not a direct link between the two, but opponents and supporters of the Garden States wage increase both had something to say.
It was nonsensical to debate whether we should raise the minimum wage in New Jersey by one dollar. It is a no brainer because that money was going to immediately be coming right back into our local economy, said Assemblywoman Sheila Oliver (D-East Orange), who helped spearhead the effort to increase the wage.
In November, New Jersey voters overwhelmingly approved a ballot question to hike the wage from $7.25 an hour to $8.25 and to tie future increases to the rate of inflation every year. The increase went into effect on January 1.
Many in the Garden State business community fought against the minimum wage increase and arent convinced the study proves anything. What do they think the impact will be on employers?
Honestly its too early to tell, said David Brogan, first vice president with the New Jersey Business and Industry Association. What we do know is that its a government mandated increase in labor costs. That money needs to come from somewhere. That could mean less hours, less bonuses, less shifts and potentially less employees.
The wage increase is not only helping businesses find workers, it is helping them hold on to the employees that already have Oliver said.
I think that we have thwarted the argument that it is a job killer, Oliver said.
We dont know the true impact, Brogan explained, because we dont know how much of an increase we will see next year when the rate of inflation is calculated.
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This “study” is pure, 100%, unadulturated CRAP
Use Common Core math and you can make it work.
Perhaps the minimum wage rate hasn’t caught up with the market rate?
I haven’t read the report, but what percentasge of wage earners are paid at the miminum wage - less than 5%?
That could influence the lack of effect on overall payrolls.
Union contracts are tied to the minimum wage.
Good Point- this is a stupid study. Obama plays the same game when he makes statements that increasing the Minimum wage does not have widespread impact on unemployment. This is true, but unfortunately, increasing the minimum wage has the most serve and DIRECT impact on the people increasing the minimum wage is supposed to help.
Selection bias.
Further to my post #10 as repeated here: “Just like the Democrats unfunded mandates are intended to tie up State funds to cause the States to be more vulnerable to Federal financial assistance, manipulation, and ultimately control, so is the Democrats minimum wage scheme.
Be minimum wage Democrat instigators Federal, or State it doesnt matter as its always the Democrats, and their intent is to assault capitalism by driving up costs.”
I would like to point out that it’s NOT unlike the Cloward-Piven scheme.
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