The Effects of A Minimum-Wage Increase On Employment and Family Income
The Effects of A Minimum-Wage Increase On Employment and Family Income
The Effects of A Minimum-Wage Increase On Employment and Family Income
CBO
The Effects of a Minimum-Wage Increase on Employment and Family Income
2013 Dollars per Hour 12 Actual Projected
$9.00 Option
Current Law 6
FEBRUARY 2014
Notes
Estimates of the effect on employment of the options to increase the minimum wage are rounded to the nearest 100,000 workers. Numbers in the text, tables, and figures may not add up to totals because of rounding.
CBO
Contents
Summary What Options for Increasing the Minimum Wage Did CBO Examine? What Effects Would Those Options Have? The Current Federal Minimum Wage Two Options for Increasing the Federal Minimum Wage A $10.10 Option A $9.00 Option How Increases in the Minimum Wage Affect Employment and Family Income Employment Family Income CBOs Findings About Employment and Family Income Effects of the Options on Employment Effects of the Options on Family Income The Effect of an Increase in the Minimum Wage on the Federal Budget
BOX: THE MINIMUM WAGE AND THE EARNED INCOME TAX CREDIT
1 1 1 4 4 5 6 6 6 8 8 9 11 13 15 16 17 19 33 38 39
Effects for People Whose Income Would Rise Effects for People Whose Income Would Fall Appendix A: The Basis of CBOs Findings Appendix B: Research About the Effects of Minimum-Wage Increases List of Tables and Figures About This Document
CBO
Summary
Increasing the minimum wage would have two principal effects on low-wage workers. Most of them would receive higher pay that would increase their familys income, and some of those families would see their income rise above the federal poverty threshold. But some jobs for low-wage workers would probably be eliminated, the income of most workers who became jobless would fall substantially, and the share of low-wage workers who were employed would probably fall slightly.
the change in their wages would be greater; and, CBO expects, employment would be more responsive to a minimum-wage increase that was larger and was subsequently adjusted for inflation. The net effect of either option on the federal budget would probably be small. Effects of the $10.10 Option on Employment and Income. Once fully implemented in the second half of 2016, the $10.10 option would reduce total employment by about 500,000 workers, or 0.3 percent, CBO projects. As with any such estimates, however, the actual losses could be smaller or larger; in CBOs assessment, there is about a two-thirds chance that the effect would be in the range between a very slight reduction in employment and a reduction in employment of 1.0 million workers (see Table 1). Many more low-wage workers would see an increase in their earnings. Of those workers who will earn up to $10.10 under current law, mostabout 16.5 million, according to CBOs estimateswould have higher earnings during an average week in the second half of 2016 if the $10.10 option was implemented.1 Some of the people earning slightly more than $10.10 would also have higher earnings under that option, for reasons discussed below. Further, a few higher-wage workers would owe their jobs and increased earnings to the heightened demand for goods and services that would result from the minimumwage increase.
1. In addition to the people who became jobless, some workers earning less than $10.10 per hour and not covered by minimumwage laws would also not have increased earnings.
What Options for Increasing the Minimum Wage Did CBO Examine?
For this report, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) examined the effects on employment and family income of two options for increasing the federal minimum wage:
A $10.10 option would increase the federal minimum wage from its current rate of $7.25 per hour to $10.10 per hour in three stepsin 2014, 2015, and 2016. After reaching $10.10 in 2016, the minimum wage would be adjusted annually for inflation as measured by the consumer price index. A $9.00 option would raise the federal minimum wage from $7.25 per hour to $9.00 per hour in two stepsin 2015 and 2016. After reaching $9.00 in 2016, the minimum wage would not be subsequently adjusted for inflation.
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Table 1.
Estimated Effects on Employment, Income, and Poverty of an Increase in the Federal Minimum Wage, Second Half of 2016
$10.10 Option a $9.00 Option b
Change in Employment Central estimatec Likely ranged Number of Workers With Hourly Wages Less Than the Proposed Minimum Whose Earnings Would Increase in an Average Weeke Change in Real Income (2013 dollars, annualized) Families whose income is below the poverty threshold Families whose income is between one and three times the poverty threshold Families whose income is between three and six times the poverty threshold Families whose income is six times the poverty threshold or more Change in the Number of People Below the Poverty Threshold
g f
-500,000 workers Very slight decrease to -1.0 million workers 16.5 million $5 billion $12 billion $2 billion -$17 billion -900,000
-100,000 workers Very slight increase to -200,000 workers 7.6 million $1 billion $3 billion $1 billion -$4 billion -300,000
Source: Congressional Budget Office based on monthly and annual data from the Census Bureaus Current Population Survey. a. The minimum wage would rise (in three steps, starting in 2014) to $10.10 by July 1, 2016, and then be indexed to inflation. b. The minimum wage would rise (in two steps, starting in 2015) to $9.00 by July 1, 2016, and would not be subsequently indexed to inflation. c. Uses values at or near the midpoints of estimated ranges for key inputs. d. In CBOs assessment, there is a two-thirds chance that the actual effect would be within this range. e. Some of the people with hourly wages slightly above the proposed minimum wage would also have increased earnings under the options. f. Changes in real (inflation-adjusted) income include increases in earnings for workers who would receive a higher wage, decreases in earnings for workers who would be jobless because of the minimum-wage increase, losses in income for business owners, decreases in income because of increases in prices, and increases in income generated by higher demand for goods and services.
g. Calculated using before-tax family cash income. Poverty thresholds vary with family size and composition. The definitions of income and of poverty thresholds are those used to determine the official poverty rate and are as defined by the Census Bureau. CBO projects that in 2016, the poverty threshold (in 2013 dollars) will be about $18,700 for a family of three and $24,100 for a family of four.
The increased earnings for low-wage workers resulting from the higher minimum wage would total $31 billion, by CBOs estimate.2 However, those earnings would not go only to low-income families, because many low-wage workers are not members of low-income families. Just 19 percent of the $31 billion would accrue to families with earnings below the poverty threshold, whereas
29 percent would accrue to families earning more than three times the poverty threshold, CBO estimates.3 Moreover, the increased earnings for some workers would be accompanied by reductions in real (inflation-adjusted) income for the people who became jobless because of the minimum-wage increase, for business owners, and for consumers facing higher prices. CBO examined family
3. Poverty thresholds vary with family size and composition; CBO projects that in 2016, the poverty threshold (in 2013 dollars) will be about $18,700 for a family of three and $24,100 for a family of four.
2. All effects on income are reported for the second half of 2016; annualized (that is, multiplied by two); and presented in 2013 dollars.
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income overall and for various income groups, reaching the following conclusions:
Once the increases and decreases in income for all workers are taken into account, overall real income would rise by $2 billion. Real income would increase, on net, by $5 billion for families whose income will be below the poverty threshold under current law, boosting their average family income by about 3 percent and moving about 900,000 people, on net, above the poverty threshold (out of the roughly 45 million people who are projected to be below that threshold under current law). Families whose income would have been between one and three times the poverty threshold would receive, on net, $12 billion in additional real income. About $2 billion, on net, would go to families whose income would have been between three and six times the poverty threshold. Real income would decrease, on net, by $17 billion for families whose income would otherwise have been six times the poverty threshold or more, lowering their average family income by 0.4 percent.
Once the increases and decreases in income for all workers are taken into account, overall real income would rise by $1 billion. Real income would increase, on net, by about $1 billion for families whose income will be below the poverty threshold under current law, boosting their average family income by about 1 percent and moving about 300,000 people, on net, above the poverty threshold. Families whose income would have been between one and three times the poverty threshold would receive, on net, $3 billion in additional real income. About $1 billion, on net, would go to families whose income would have been between three and six times the poverty threshold. Real income would decrease, on net, by $4 billion for families whose income would otherwise have been six times the poverty threshold or more, lowering their average family income by about 0.1 percent.
Effects of the $9.00 Option on Employment and Income. The $9.00 option would reduce employment by about 100,000 workers, or by less than 0.1 percent, CBO projects. There is about a two-thirds chance that the effect would be in the range between a very slight increase in employment and a reduction in employment of 200,000 workers, in CBOs assessment. Roughly 7.6 million workers who will earn up to $9.00 per hour under current law would have higher earnings during an average week in the second half of 2016 if this option was implemented, CBO estimates, and some people earning more than $9.00 would have higher earnings as well. The increased earnings for low-wage workers resulting from the higher minimum wage would total $9 billion; 22 percent of that sum would accrue to families with income below the poverty threshold, whereas 33 percent would accrue to families earning more than three times the poverty threshold, CBO estimates. For family income overall and for various income groups, CBO estimates the following:
Effects of a Minimum-Wage Increase on the Federal Budget. In addition to affecting employment and family income, increasing the federal minimum wage would affect the federal budget directly by increasing the wages that the federal government paid to a small number of hourly employees and indirectly by boosting the prices of some goods and services purchased by the government. Most of those costs would need to be covered by discretionary appropriations, which are capped through 2021 under current law. Federal spending and taxes would also be indirectly affected by the increases in real income for some people and the reduction in real income for others. As a group, workers with increased earnings would pay more in taxes and receive less in federal benefits of certain types than they would have otherwise. However, people who became jobless because of the minimum-wage increase, business owners, and consumers facing higher prices would see a reduction in real income and would collectively pay less in taxes and receive more in federal benefits than they would have otherwise. CBO concludes that the net effect on the federal budget of raising the minimum wage would probably be a small decrease in budget deficits for several years but a small increase in budget deficits thereafter. It is unclear whether the effect for the coming decade as a whole would be a small increase or a small decrease in budget deficits. CBO
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already been legislated. In California, for example, the minimum wage is scheduled to increase from $8.00 to $9.00 in July 2014 and to $10.00 in January 2016. Some localities also have minimum wages that are higher than the applicable state or federal minimum wage; in San Francisco, for instance, the minimum wage is $10.74 per hour. Another 20 states have minimum wages equal to the federal minimum wage (and linked to it, in some cases). In some of those states, the state laws apply to some workers and employers who are not covered by the FLSA. At the moment, about half of all workers in the United States live in states where the applicable minimum wage is more than $7.25 per hour. The applicable minimum wage in those states ranges from $7.40 to $9.32 per hour (see Figure 2). Minimum-wage workers are sometimes thought of primarily as teenagers from nonpoor families who are working part time, but that is not the case now. Of the 5.5 million workers who earned within 25 cents of the minimum wage in 2013, three-quarters were at least 20 years old and two-fifths worked full time. Their median family income was about $30,000, CBO estimates. (Some of the family incomes within that group of workers were substantially higher or lower than that amount, in part because the number of working adults in their families varied.)
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Figure 1.
Workers Hourly Wages and the Federal Minimum Wage, 1973 to 2018
(2013 dollars per hour)
12
Actual Projected
$10.10 Optionb
10
6
Federal Minimum Wage
4 0 1973 1976 1979 1982 1985 1988 1991 1994 1997 2000 2003 2006 2009 2012 2015 2018
Source: Congressional Budget Office based on monthly data from the Census Bureaus Current Population Survey and on data from the Department of Labor. Note: CBO converted wages to 2013 dollars using the price index for personal consumption expenditures published by the Bureau of Economic Analysis. For example, nominal values in 2016 of $10.10 and $9.00 were adjusted downward to account for projected inflation between 2013 and 2016. After 2016, the minimum wage under the $10.10 option would increase slightly in the 2013 dollars shown in this figure because it would be indexed to the consumer price index, which would grow faster than the price index for personal consumption expenditures, CBO projects. Values for the federal minimum wageboth actual values and projected values under the $10.10 option, the $9.00 option, and current laware as of July 1 of each year. a. The hourly wage of workers not paid hourly was estimated as their weekly earnings divided by their usual hours worked per week. Values after those for 2013 are projected under current law. b. The minimum wage would rise (in three steps, starting in 2014) to $10.10 by July 1, 2016, and then be indexed to inflation. c. The minimum wage would rise (in two steps, starting in 2015) to $9.00 by July 1, 2016, and would not be subsequently indexed to inflation.
for inflation.7 CBO has assessed the impact of such an option, as well as the impact of a smaller increase that would boost the minimum wage to $9.00 per hour and would not link future increases to inflation. (See Appendix A for information about how CBO conducted its assessments.) The options that CBO analyzed would not change other provisions of the FLSA, such as the one that applies to wages for teenage workers during their first 90 days of employment.
2014; to $9.15 one year after that; and to $10.10 after another year. The increase in the minimum wage between 2014 and 2016 under this option would be about 40 percent, roughly the same percentage as the total increase from 2007 to 2009 but larger than several earlier increases. Each year after that, the minimum wage would rise with the consumer price index.8 In addition, this option would raise the minimum cash wage for tipped workers from $2.13 per hour to $4.90 in three steps timed to coincide with the changes in the minimum wage. Then, starting in 2017, the minimum
8. The $10.10 option is based on the provisions of S. 460, the Fair Minimum Wage Act of 2013. (The FLSA and S. 460 also apply to Puerto Rico and certain other U.S. territories, but because of limitations in available data, CBOs analysis is limited to the effects of minimum-wage increases on employment and family income in the 50 states and the District of Columbia.)
A $10.10 Option
CBO examined an option that would increase the federal minimum wage from $7.25 per hour to $8.20 on July 1,
7. See, for example, S. 460, the Fair Minimum Wage Act of 2013; S. 1737, the Minimum Wage Fairness Act; and H.R. 3939, the Invest in United States Act of 2014. Another proposal (H.R. 3746, the Fair Minimum Wage Act of 2013) would increase the minimum wage to $11.00 and subsequently index it for inflation.
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Figure 2.
How Increases in the Minimum Wage Affect Employment and Family Income
In general, increases in the minimum wage probably reduce employment for some low-wage workers. At the same time, however, they increase family income for many more low-wage workers.
Employment
$8.01 to $9.32 (25%)
According to conventional economic analysis, increasing the minimum wage reduces employment in two ways. First, higher wages increase the cost to employers of producing goods and services. The employers pass some of those increased costs on to consumers in the form of higher prices, and those higher prices, in turn, lead the consumers to purchase fewer of the goods and services. The employers consequently produce fewer goods and services, so they hire fewer workers. That is known as a scale effect, and it reduces employment among both low-wage workers and higher-wage workers. Second, a minimum-wage increase raises the cost of lowwage workers relative to other inputs that employers use to produce goods and services, such as machines, technology, and more productive higher-wage workers. Some employers respond by reducing their use of low-wage workers and shifting toward those other inputs. That is known as a substitution effect, and it reduces employment among low-wage workers but increases it among higher-wage workers. However, conventional economic analysis might not apply in certain circumstances. For example, when a firm is hiring more workers and needs to boost pay for existing workers doing the same workto match what it needs to pay to recruit the new workershiring a new worker costs the company not only that new workers wages but also the additional wages paid to retain other workers. Under those circumstances, which arise more often when finding a new job is time-consuming and costly for workers, increasing the minimum wage means that businesses have to pay the existing workers more, whether or not a new employee was hired; as a result, it lowers the additional cost of hiring a new employee, leading to increased employment. There is a wide range of views among economists about the merits of the conventional analysis and of this alternative. The low-wage workers whose wages are affected by increases in the minimum wage include not only those workers who would otherwise have earned less than the
Source: Congressional Budget Office based on monthly data from the Census Bureaus Current Population Survey and on data from the Department of Labor. Note: As of January 1, 2014, 21 states and the District of Columbia had a minimum wage above the federal minimum wage. The highest was $9.32 in the state of Washington.
cash wage for tipped workers would rise by 95 cents each year until it reached 70 percent of the minimum wage (which would occur in 2019, by CBOs estimate); in subsequent years, it would be tied to inflation.
A $9.00 Option
CBO also examined a smaller change that would increase the federal minimum wage from $7.25 per hour to $8.10 on July 1, 2015, and to $9.00 on July 1, 2016. The minimum cash wage for tipped workers would increase when the minimum wage increased, and by the same percentage. The increase in the minimum wage would start one year later than it would under the $10.10 option. Like previous minimum-wage increases, this one would not be indexed to subsequent inflation. This $9.00 option is more similar than the $10.10 option to minimum-wage increases studied in the economics literature in a number of respects: the size of the increase, the portion of the workforce that it would affect, and the fact that its real value would be eroded over time. CBO
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minimum but also, in some cases, workers who would have earned slightly more than the minimum. After a minimum-wage increase, some employers try to preserve differentials in pay that existed beforefor example, so that supervisors continue to be paid more than the people they superviseby raising the wages of people who previously earned a little more than the new minimum. Also, some wages determined by collective bargaining agreements are tied to the federal minimum wage and could therefore increase. As a result, an increase in the minimum wage causes some workers who would otherwise have earned slightly more than the new minimum wage to become jobless, for the same reasons that lowerwage workers do; at the same time, some firms hire more of those workers as substitutes for the workers whose wages were required to be increased. The change in employment of low-wage workers caused by a minimum-wage increase differs substantially from firm to firm. Employment falls more at firms whose customers are very sensitive to price increases, because demand for their products or services declines more as prices rise, so those firms cut production more than other firms do. Employment also falls more at firms that can readily substitute other inputs for low-wage workers and at firms where low-wage workers constitute a large fraction of input costs. However, when low-wage workers have fewer employment alternatives overall, employment can fall less at firms that offset some of the increased costs with higher productivity from employees working harder to keep their better-paying jobs and with the lower cost of filling vacant positions that results from higher wages attracting more applicants and reducing turnover. Some firms, particularly those that do not employ many lowwage workers but that compete with firms that do, might see demand rise for their goods and services as their competitors costs rise; such firms would tend to hire more low-wage workers as a result. The change in employment of low-wage workers also differs over time. At first, when the minimum wage rises, some firms employ fewer low-wage workers, while other firms do not; the reduced employment is concentrated in businesses and industries where higher prices result in larger reductions in demand. Over a longer time frame, however, more firms replace low-wage workers with inputs that are relatively less expensive, such as more productive higher-wage workers. Thus, the percentage reduction in employment of low-wage workers is generally greater in the long term than in the short term, in
CBOs assessment. (However, the total reduction in employment might be smaller in the long term; that total depends not only on the percentage reduction in employment of low-wage workers but also on the number of such workers, which could decline over time if wage growth for low-wage workers exceeded any increase in the minimum wage, all else being equal.) Employers might respond to an increase in the minimum wage in ways other than boosting prices or substituting other inputs for low-wage workers. For example, they might partly offset a minimum-wage increase by reducing other costs, including workers fringe benefits (such as health insurance or pensions) and job perks (such as free meals). As a result, a higher minimum wage might increase total compensation (which includes benefits and perks) less than it increased cash wages alone. That, in turn, would give employers a smaller incentive to reduce their employment of low-wage workers. However, such benefit reductions would probably be modest, in part because low-wage workers generally receive few benefits related to pensions or health insurance. In addition, tax rules specify that employers who reduce low-wage workers nonwage benefits can face unfavorable tax treatment for higher-wage workers nonwage benefits. Employers can also partly offset higher wages for low-wage workers by reducing either formal training or informal mentoring and coaching. The evidence on how much employers reduce benefits, training, or other costs is mixed. (For examples of such evidence, see Appendix B.) An increase in the minimum wage also affects the employment of low-wage workers in the short term through changes in the economywide demand for goods and services. A higher minimum wage shifts income from higher-wage consumers and business owners to low-wage workers. Because those low-wage workers tend to spend a larger fraction of their earnings, some firms see increased demand for their goods and services, boosting the employment of low-wage workers and higher-wage workers alike. That effect is larger when the economy is weaker, and it is larger in regions of the country where the economy is weaker. Low-wage workers are not the only ones whose employment can be affected by a minimum-wage increase; the employment of higher-wage workers can be affected as well, in several ways. Firms that cut back on production tend to reduce the number of both higher-wage workers and low-wage workers. But once a minimum-wage
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increase makes higher-wage workers relatively less expensive, firms sometimes hire more of them to replace a larger number of less productive low-wage workers. Another factor affecting higher-wage workers is the increase in the economywide demand for goods and services. All in all, a higher minimum wage tends to increase the employment of higher-wage workers slightly, according to CBOs analysis.
goods and services. Raising the minimum wage increases that demand, in CBOs assessment, because the families that experience increases in income tend to raise their consumption more than the families that experience decreases in income tend to reduce their consumption. In the short term, that increase in demand raises the nations output and income slightly, which means that the income losses of some people are slightly smaller than the income gains of others.
Family Income
For most families with low-wage workers, a higher minimum wage boosts family income, because of the increase in earnings that many of those workers (including those whose wages were slightly above the new minimum) receive. A much smaller number of low-wage workers become jobless and therefore experience a decline in earnings because of the higher minimum wage. For families with low-wage workers, the effect of a higher minimum wage depends on how many such workers are in a family, whether those workers become jobless (and, if so, for how long), and whether there are other changes in family income. For instance, the decline in income from losing a job can be offset in part by increases in nonlabor income, such as unemployment compensation, or by increases in the work of other family members. For business owners, family income (including income for shareholders) falls to the extent that firms profits are reduced. In addition, real family income for many people tends to fall a bit, because the increase in prices of goods and services reduces families purchasing power. The effects on total national income of an increase in the minimum wage differ in the long term and in the short term. In the long term, the key determinant of the nations output and income is the size and quality of the workforce, the stock of productive capital (such as factories and computers), and the efficiency with which workers and capital are used to produce goods and services (known as total factor productivity). Raising the minimum wage probably reduces employment, in CBOs assessment. In the long term, that reduction in the workforce lowers the nations output and income a little, which means that the income losses of some people are slightly larger than the income gains of others. In the short term, by contrast, the nations output and income can deviate from the amounts that would typically arise from a given workforce, capital stock, and productivity in response to changes in the economywide demand for
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people earning such wages will be at least 20 years old, 56 percent will be female, and 91 percent will not have attained a bachelors degree, CBO estimates (see Table 2).
1.0 million workers; thus, there is a one-third chance that the effect would be either above or below that range. The most important factors contributing to the width of the range are uncertainty about the growth of wages over the next three years (which influences the number of workers who would be affected by the minimum-wage increase, as well as the extent to which the increase would raise their wages) and uncertainty about the responsiveness of employment to an increase in wages. For example, if wage growth under current law was slower than CBO projects, implementing the increase would result in more people with increased wages and a greater reduction in employment than CBOs central estimate suggests. Under the $9.00 option, employment would decline by about 100,000 workers in the second half of 2016, relative to what it would be under current law, according to CBOs central estimate. That estimate is much smaller than the central estimate for the $10.10 option for three reasons: Fewer workers would be affected; the change in their wages would be smaller; and four aspects of the $9.00 option would make employment in 2016 less responsive to a minimum-wage increase, CBO expects.12 The first of those four aspects is that the $9.00 option is not indexed to inflation, so some employers would probably refrain from reducing employment, knowing that inflation would erode the cost of paying higher wages. Second, under the $9.00 option, the second half of 2016 arrives one year after the initial increase in the minimum wagerather than two years, as under the $10.10 optionand employers would be less likely to reduce employment soon after an increase in the minimum wage than they would be over a longer period. Third, because the cost of paying higher wages under the $9.00 option is smaller than that of the $10.10 option, CBO expects that fewer employers would find it desirable to incur the adjustment costs of reducing employment (such as installation of new equipment). Fourth, the $9.00 option would apply to a smaller share of the workforce. Four percent of the labor hours in the economy will be worked
12. Under the $9.00 option, the central estimate of the responsiveness of employment to a change in the applicable minimum wage is -0.075 for teenagers, for example, which means that the employment of teenagers would be reduced by three-quarters of one percent after a 10 percent change in the minimum wage. The equivalent estimate under the $10.10 option is -0.10. See Appendix A for more information.
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Table 2.
Age 16 to 19 20 and older All Sex Female Male All Educational Attainment Less than high school High school graduate or some college Bachelors degree All Hours Worked per Week Fewer than 35 35 or more All Number of Employees in Firm Fewer than 50 50 or more All
87 22 24 28 21 24 58 30 7 24 58 16 24 30 19 24
12 88 ___ 100 56 44 ___ 100 21 70 10 ___ 100 47 53 ___ 100 48 52 ___ 100
Source: Congressional Budget Office based on monthly and annual data from the Census Bureaus Current Population Survey. Note: Low-wage workers are people who are projected, under current law in the second half of 2016, to be paid less than $11.50 per hour.
by people who will earn up to $9.00 per hour under current law and who would either receive a wage increase or be jobless if the $9.00 option was implemented, CBO estimates. In contrast, about 10 percent of labor hours will be worked by people who will earn up to $10.10 per hour under current law and who would either receive a wage increase or be jobless if the $10.10 option was implemented. Thus, the $9.00 option would cause a correspondingly smaller increase in costs, which employers would be likely to absorb less through reductions in employment and more in other ways. In CBOs assessment, there is a two-thirds chance that the effect of the $9.00 option would be in the range between a very slight increase in the number of jobs and a loss of 200,000 jobs.13 If employment increased under either option, in CBOs judgment, it would probably be because increased demand for goods and services (resulting from the shift of income from higher-income to CBO
lower-income people) had boosted economic activity and generated more jobs than were lost as a direct result of the increase in the cost of hiring low-wage workers. CBO has not analyzed the effects of either option on the number of hours worked by people who would remain employed or on the decision to search actively for work and join the labor force by people who would not
13. In a recent survey, leading economists were asked whether they agreed with the statement that raising the federal minimum wage to $9 per hour would make it noticeably harder for low-skilled workers to find employment. When the results were weighted by the respondents confidence, 40 percent of the economists agreed with the statement, 38 percent disagreed, and 22 percent were uncertain. However, the survey did not specify how large a drop in employment was meant by noticeably harder . . . to find employment. See University of Chicago Booth School of Business, Minimum Wage (published February 26, 2013; accessed January 8, 2014), http://tinyurl.com/aa52pfo.
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otherwise be working. Therefore, the agency has not reported the effects of the options on full-time-equivalent employment or on the unemployment rate.
that (see Figure 3). (In 2016, six times the poverty threshold will be roughly $120,000 for a family of three and $150,000 for a family of four, CBO projects.) According to CBOs estimates, the increase in earnings for the few low-wage workers living in that last group of families would be more than offset by income reductions, in part because the losses in business income and in real income from price increases would be concentrated in those families (see Table 3). Families whose income will be below the poverty threshold in 2016 under current law will have an average income of $10,700, CBO projects (see Table 4 on page 14). The agency estimates that the $10.10 option would raise their average real income by about $300, or 2.8 percent. For families whose income would otherwise have been between the poverty threshold and 1.5 times that amount, average real income would increase by about $300, or 1.1 percent. The increase in average income would be smaller, both in dollar amounts and as a share of family income, for families whose income would have been between 1.5 times and six times the poverty threshold. And for families whose income would otherwise have been greater than six times the poverty threshold, the total effect of the $10.10 option would be a reduction in average real income of about $700, or 0.4 percent. But the effects of a minimum-wage increase on family income would vary even among families with similar incomes under current law. For example, many families with income less than six times the poverty threshold would see their income rise; but income for a smaller set of those families would decline, because some low-wage workers would lose jobs that they would otherwise have. Under current law, CBO projects, there will be roughly 45 million people in families whose income is below the poverty threshold in 2016. The $10.10 option would reduce that number by about 900,000, or 2 percent, according to CBOs estimate. That estimate takes into account both families whose income would increase and move them out of poverty and families whose income would fall and move them into poverty. The estimate uses a measure of family income called cash income, which is used to determine the official poverty rate. Cash income includes earnings and cash transfers from the government, such as Supplemental Security Income benefits. It excludes noncash transfers, such as benefits from Medicaid and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP, formerly known as the Food Stamp program); taxes; and tax credits, such as the earned CBO
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Figure 3.
Estimated Effects on Real Family Income of an Increase in the Federal Minimum Wage, Second Half of 2016
(Billions of 2013 dollars, annualized)
10 5 0 -5 -10 -15 -20 Less Than 1.0 1.0 to 1.49 1.5 to 1.99 2.0 to 2.99 3.0 to 5.99 6.0 or More
Ratio of Family Income to the Poverty Threshold
$10.10 Optiona
Overall Change in Real Incomeb Change in Income From Increases in Earnings for Low-Wage Workersc
$9.00 Optiond
10 5 0 -5 -10 -15 -20 Less Than 1.0 1.0 to 1.49 1.5 to 1.99 2.0 to 2.99 3.0 to 5.99 6.0 or More
Ratio of Family Income to the Poverty Threshold
Overall Change in Real Incomeb Change in Income From Increases in Earnings for Low-Wage Workersc
Source: Congressional Budget Office based on annual data from the Census Bureaus Current Population Survey. Note: Calculated using before-tax family cash income. Poverty thresholds vary with family size and composition. The definitions of income and of poverty thresholds are those used to determine the official poverty rate and are as defined by the Census Bureau. CBO projects that in 2016, the poverty threshold (in 2013 dollars) will be about $18,700 for a family of three and $24,100 for a family of four. a. The minimum wage would rise (in three steps, starting in 2014) to $10.10 by July 1, 2016, and then be indexed to inflation. b. Changes in real (inflation-adjusted) income include increases in earnings for workers who would receive a higher wage, decreases in earnings for workers who would be jobless because of the minimum-wage increase, losses in income for business owners, decreases in income because of increases in prices, and increases in income generated by higher demand for goods and services. c. Increases in earnings for workers who are projected, under current law, to be paid less than $11.50 per hour. d. The minimum wage would rise (in two steps, starting in 2015) to $9.00 by July 1, 2016, and would not be subsequently indexed to inflation.
income tax credit (EITC). (Because the EITC provides cash to many lower-income families, it is sometimes compared with the federal minimum wage in discussions about how to boost lower-income families resources; see Box 1 on page 15.) Implementing the $9.00 option would have a smaller effect on family income and on the number of people in CBO
poverty than implementing the $10.10 option would. About 7.6 million workers who will earn less than $9.00 per hour under current law would receive higher wages, CBO estimates, and so would some workers who will earn more than $9.00 per hour under current law. Once all factors are taken into account, CBO estimates that the net changes in total real income would be an increase of about $1 billion for families whose income
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Table 3.
Less Than 1.0 1.0 to 1.49 1.5 to 1.99 2.0 to 2.99 3.0 to 5.99 6.0 or More Total
6 6 7 16 39 26 ____ 100
20 16 14 18 24 9 ____ 100
difficult to project accurately. Those effects depend on many things, including the extent to which the higher minimum wage would reduce employment, the length of time that people are not working, and the rate at which wages will grow over time under current law. The larger the reduction in employment for a given increase in the minimum wage, the less effective the policy would be at raising families out of poverty. And if wages grew more quickly under current law than CBO projects, fewer workers would have their wages increased under the options, and the effect on poverty would be smaller. (If those wages grew less quickly than CBO projects, the effect would be larger.)
Source: Congressional Budget Office based on annual data from the Census Bureaus Current Population Survey. Note: Calculated using before-tax family cash income. Poverty thresholds vary with family size and composition. The definitions of income and of poverty thresholds are those used to determine the official poverty rate and are as defined by the Census Bureau. CBO projects that in 2016, the poverty threshold (in 2013 dollars) will be about $18,700 for a family of three and $24,100 for a family of four. a. Low-wage workers are people who are projected, under current law in the second half of 2016, to be paid less than $11.50 per hour.
would otherwise have been below the poverty threshold; increases totaling $4 billion for families whose income would have been between one and six times the poverty threshold; and a decrease of about $4 billion for families with higher income, as the declines in income for business owners and the loss of purchasing power would more than offset the increases in earnings for low-wage workers in that group. The agency estimates that average real family income would increase by about $100, or 0.9 percent, for families whose income would have been below the poverty threshold, and that the number of people living in such families would decline by about 300,000, or twothirds of one percent. That is one-third of the decline in the number of people in poverty that would occur under the $10.10 option, CBO projects. For families whose income would otherwise have been six times the poverty threshold or more, average real family income would be lower by 0.1 percent. The effects of the two options on average family income and on the number of people living in poverty are
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Table 4.
Estimated Effects on Average Real Family Income of an Increase in the Federal Minimum Wage, Second Half of 2016
Ratio of Family Income to the Poverty Threshold Average Real Family Income Before the Wage Change (2013 dollars, annualized) Change in Average Real Family Income 2013 Dollars, Annualized Percent $10.10 Optiona
Less Than 1.0 1.0 to 1.49 1.5 to 1.99 2.0 to 2.99 3.0 to 5.99 6.0 or More
Less Than 1.0 1.0 to 1.49 1.5 to 1.99 2.0 to 2.99 3.0 to 5.99 6.0 or More
Source: Congressional Budget Office based on annual data from the Census Bureaus Current Population Survey. Notes: Changes in real (inflation-adjusted) income include increases in earnings for workers who would receive a higher wage, decreases in earnings for workers who would be jobless because of the minimum-wage increase, losses in income for business owners, decreases in income because of increases in prices, and increases in income generated by higher demand for goods and services. Results are weighted by the number of people in the family; for example, when CBO calculated the averages, a family of three would be represented three times. Calculated using before-tax family cash income. Poverty thresholds vary with family size and composition. The definitions of income and of poverty thresholds are those used to determine the official poverty rate and are as defined by the Census Bureau. CBO projects that in 2016, the poverty threshold (in 2013 dollars) will be about $18,700 for a family of three and $24,100 for a family of four. * = between zero and $50; ** = between zero and 0.05 percent. a. The minimum wage would rise (in three steps, starting in 2014) to $10.10 by July 1, 2016, and then be indexed to inflation. b. The minimum wage would rise (in two steps, starting in 2015) to $9.00 by July 1, 2016, and would not be subsequently indexed to inflation.
CBO anticipates that the increases in income would be larger than the decreases in income for a few years after an increase in the minimum wage but would be smaller thereafter, as discussed earlier in the report. Further, for reasons discussed below, CBO anticipates that the effective marginal tax ratethat is, the combination of increased taxes and decreased benefits for each additional dollar of incomefor the increases in income would probably be slightly larger than the effective marginal tax rate for the decreases in income. Combining those factors, CBO concludes that the net effect on the federal budget of raising the minimum wage would probably be a small decrease in budget deficits for several years but a small increase in budget deficits thereafter. It is unclear whether the effect for the coming decade as a whole CBO
15. Cost estimates produced by CBO and the staff of the Joint Committee on Taxation (JCT) typically reflect the convention that macroeconomic variables, such as nominal output and the average price level, remain fixed at the values that they are projected to reach under current law. That is a long-standing conventionone that has been followed in the Congressional budget process since it was established in 1974 and by JCT since the early 1960s. Therefore, in producing a cost estimate for legislation that would increase the minimum wage, CBO and JCT would not incorporate some of the effects that such an increase would probably have on the economy. CBO was not able to assess how that approach might affect the estimated budgetary impact of increasing the minimum wage.
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Box 1.
Using the Minimum Wage or the EITC to Boost the Resources of Low-Income Families
To achieve any given increase in the resources of lower-income families would require a greater shift of resources in the economy if done by increasing the minimum wage than if done by increasing the EITC.3 The reason is that a minimum-wage increase would add to the resources of most families of low-wage workers regardless of those families income; for example, onethird of low-wage workers would be in families whose income was more than three times the federal poverty
1. Adjusted gross income is income from all sources not specifically excluded from the tax code, minus certain deductions. 2. For a more extensive description of the EITC, see Congressional Budget Office, Refundable Tax Credits (January 2013), www.cbo.gov/publication/43767. 3. In a 2007 analysis, CBO compared the cost to employers of a change in the minimum wage that increased the income of poor families by a given amount to the cost to the federal government of a change in the EITC that increased the income of poor families by roughly the same amount. The cost to employers of the change in the minimum wage was much larger than the cost to the federal government of the change in the EITC. See Congressional Budget Office, Response to a Request by Senator Grassley About the Effects of Increasing the Federal Minimum Wage Versus Expanding the Earned Income Tax Credit (attachment to a letter to the Honorable Charles E. Grassley, January 9, 2007), www.cbo.gov/publication/18281. Most of the budgetary effect of an increase in the EITC shows up as an increase in spending, rather than as a reduction in revenues, because the credit is refundable and most of the total benefits represent amounts that are paid out rather than amounts that are used to offset other tax liabilities.
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into account, although almost all of them would owe no tax or be in one of the two lowest federal income tax brackets. In addition, benefits from the EITC would fall for workers whose annual income was in the range where the credits decrease with income (see Box 1). (However, those benefits would rise for workers whose annual income remained in the income range where the credits increase with income, and some workers with increased earnings would qualify for a larger child tax credit.) The rest of the deficit reduction would result from less federal spending (aside from the effects on refundable earned income and child tax credits) for the workers receiving an increase in earnings. Spending on cash and near-cash transfer programs (such as SNAP and Supplemental Security Income) would decline for those workers, because the amount of those benefits generally falls as income rises.19 In addition, spending for premium assistance tax credits and cost-sharing subsidies for health insurance purchased through exchanges would decline for people who will be receiving such support under current law, because the amount of that support also generally falls as income rises.20 The estimated effective federal marginal tax rate of 32 percent does not include the budgetary effects of some peoples moving out of Medicaid coverage or into subsidized insurance coverage through exchanges because their earnings had increased.21 Some of those effects would raise federal costs and others would lower them. In particular, some people who will be eligible for Medicaid
19. Some researchers have examined the change in cash and near-cash transfer payments that would result from a minimum-wage increase. See Linda Giannarelli, Kye Lippold, and Michael Martinez-Schiferl, Reducing Poverty in Wisconsin: Analysis of the Community Advocates Public Policy Institute Policy Package (Urban Institute, June 2012), http://tinyurl.com/q7jb8v6 (PDF, 2.1 MB); and Linda Giannarelli, Joyce Morton, and Laura Wheaton, Estimating the Anti-Poverty Effects of Changes in Taxes and Benefits with the TRIM3 Microsimulation Model (Urban Institute, April 2007), http://tinyurl.com/p75lejh (PDF, 2.9 MB). The authors estimate that the reduction in transfer payments for those receiving an increase in earnings would be roughly 4 percent of that increase in earnings. 20. A small portion of the premium assistance tax credits represents a reduction in revenues. 21. There would also be budgetary effects of some peoples moving between eligibility categories for Medicaid and some peoples moving between Medicaid and the Childrens Health Insurance Program.
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under current law and would receive higher earnings because of a minimum-wage increase would lose eligibility for Medicaid. Some of those people would gain eligibility for subsidized coverage through exchanges and would choose to take up that coverage; for those people, federal costs would rise. However, some of the people who would lose eligibility for Medicaid would not gain eligibility for subsidized coverage through exchanges (because their income would still be too low) or would gain eligibility but would choose not to take up that coverage (in part because they would have to pay a portion of their premiums themselves); for those people, federal costs would fall. Moreover, some people who, under current law, will not be eligible either for Medicaid or for subsidized coverage through exchanges (because they live in a state that has not expanded Medicaid coverage under the Affordable Care Act but will have too little income to qualify for the subsidies) would gain eligibility for subsidized coverage through exchanges and would choose to take up that coverage; for those people, federal costs would rise. The net federal cost of those various shifts would be small, CBO expects.
CBO estimates that workers who were jobless for at least part of a year because of the minimum-wage increase would suffer a loss of real income. As a result, those workers would pay less in taxes and receive more in benefits. The effective federal marginal tax rate for those workers would be similar in magnitude to the rate for workers whose earnings rose. CBO estimates that profits would also be lower. The lower profits would mean less in personal and corporate income tax receipts. CBO expects that some of the reduction in profits would be for businesses subject to the corporate tax, which would lower corporate tax receipts; the reduction in profits would also indirectly reduce personal income tax receipts, because stockholders dividend income and realized capital gains on corporate stock would be lower. For those firms, CBO estimates that the decline in corporate and personal tax payments would amount to roughly one-third of the decline in profits. However, some of the reduction in profits would be for firms not subject to the corporate tax, most of whose income is directly subject to the individual income tax. For those firms, the resulting reduction in individual income tax payments could be somewhat lower, as a share of the reduction in profits, than the estimated one-third decline for firms subject to the corporate tax. Prices would rise as a result of a minimum-wage increase, according to CBOs analysis. That increase in prices would raise federal transfer payments, because some of those payments, such as Social Security, are automatically indexed to changes in the price level. An increase in prices would also reduce federal personal income taxes, because many parameters of the tax system change automatically when the price level rises. Federal spending that is not subject to statutory caps and is not indexed to changes in the price level might also increase, although the extent of that increase would depend on the concentration of minimum-wage workers in the sectors of the economy in which the federal government was doing such spending. CBO was not able to estimate the effective marginal tax rate from the collection of changes in taxes and spending that would take place because of price changes.
CBO
This appendix describes the steps that the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) took to arrive at the estimates in this reportestimates of the number of low-wage workers affected by the two options for increasing the minimum wage; of the responsiveness of employment to changes in the minimum wage; of the options total effects on employment; and of the options effects on family income.
minimum wages in 2016 and who therefore would probably not be affected by a change in the federal minimum.) Of the 17.0 million workers directly affected by the $10.10 option, 16.5 million would end up with higher earnings during an average week in the second half of 2016, and 500,000 would end up jobless and therefore with lower earnings (as estimated using the approach described below). Of the 7.7 million workers directly affected by the $9.00 option, 7.6 million would end up with higher earnings during an average week in the second half of 2016, and 100,000 would end up jobless and therefore with lower earnings, according to CBOs estimate.
How CBO Estimated the Number of Workers Who Would Be Affected by the Options
CBO estimated the number of workers who would be directly affected by the two options for increasing the federal minimum wage. Directly affected workers are those whose wages would otherwise have been below the new federal minimum and who therefore would either receive a higher wage or become jobless if the new federal minimum was imposed. In 2016, CBO estimates, about 17.0 million workers would be directly affected by the $10.10 option and 7.7 million by the $9.00 option. CBO also estimated the number of workers whose wages would otherwise have been slightly above (as defined later in this section) the new federal minimum in 2016 and who would probably also be affected by a change in the minimum wage. Under the $10.10 option, there would be 8.0 million such workers; under the $9.00 option, 4.1 million. (The 33 million workers mentioned in the textwhich refers to all workers who are projected to earn less than $11.50 under current lawincludes not only the 17.0 million directly affected workers under the $10.10 option and the 8.0 million workers with wages slightly above $10.10 but also some workers, generally at the low end of that range, who are not covered by minimum-wage laws and some workers, at the high end of that range, who live in states projected to have high
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per week divided by their usual hours worked per week.1 Because calculated wages are subject to error, CBO adjusted those wages to be a weighted average of a workers calculated wage and the average wage of workers with similar characteristicsincreasing calculated wages that were below the group average and decreasing wages that were above it.2 In the second step, CBO applied forecasts of employment and wage growth to the hourly wages that it had calculated for 2013 to project the distribution of workers hourly wages in 2016 under current law. CBO expects that very high-wage workers will experience faster wage growth in the next several years than will workers as a whole, so the forecast of wage growth for low-wage workers used in this analysis was smaller than the one in the agencys overall economic forecast. The forecast of wage growth also accounted for the penalties, imposed under the Affordable Care Act, that some employers will pay for not providing qualifying health insurance; those employers will probably pass along the cost of those penalties to their workers in the form of reduced wages.3 In addition, CBO accounted for prospective increases in some states minimum wages, including both changes scheduled in current state laws and changes projected on the basis of how states have changed their minimum wages in the past. That adjustment boosted projected wage growth for workers in those states. Altogether, CBO projected that nominal wages of low-wage workersfor example, those at the 10th percentile of the wage distributionwould grow at an average annual rate of 2.9 percent between 2013 and 2016 under current law.
1. If the number of hours that the respondents usually worked per week varied, CBO used the number of hours that they reported having worked during the week prior to the survey. If that number was unavailable, CBO used the average hours of full-time or parttime workers, as appropriate. If the Census Bureau imputed an hourly wage for the worker, CBO used that wage. 2. That adjustment is based in part on findings from Thomas Lemieux, Increasing Residual Wage Inequality: Composition Effects, Noisy Data, or Rising Demand for Skill? American Economic Review, vol. 96, no. 3 (June 2006), pp. 461498, http://dx.doi.org/10.1257/aer.96.3.461. 3. See Congressional Budget Office, The Budget and Economic Outlook: 2014 to 2024 (February 2014), Appendix C, www.cbo.gov/publication/45010. That forecast of wage growth was made in December 2013 and does not account for subsequent developments.
In the third step, CBO identified workers who would be directly affected by a change in the federal minimum wage in 2016. That group includes most workers projected to have hourly wages lower than the new minimum. However, it does not include 2.6 million low-wage workers who, CBO projects, would not be covered or affected by the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA).4 The group of directly affected workers does include 3.5 million workers who, though they may not be covered by the FLSA, are expected by CBO to be affected by an increase in the federal minimum because their hourly wages tend to be as concentrated near the minimum as are the wages of workers covered by the FLSA; those 3.5 million workers consist of employees of small firms, workers in occupations generally exempt from the FLSA, and teenagers in their first 90 days of employment.5 CBO distinguished tipped from nontipped workers because a separate minimum cash hourly wage applies to workers who receive more than $30 per month in tips. Under the FLSA and many state laws, employers may pay such workers a lower cash hourly wage if tips bring their total hourly earnings above the minimum hourly wage. To estimate the number of tipped workers, CBO applied the lower minimum cash wage to workers in 11 occupations (such as waiter, bartender, and hairdresser) whose compensation depends heavily on tips. They constitute about 10 percent of low-wage workers.
Other Workers Who Would Probably Be Affected by Increases in the Minimum Wage
CBO also considered the effects of a minimum-wage increase on the wages and employment of workers whose wages would otherwise have been higher than the new
4. To project the percentage of low-wage workers who would not be covered or affected by the FLSA in 2016, CBO estimated the share earning less than the federal minimum wage (or their states minimum wage, if higher) in 2013, which was 12 percent. Because the agency concluded that nontipped workers who reported being paid up to 25 cents less, and tipped workers who reported being paid up to 13 cents less, than the federal minimum wageor the state minimum, if it was higherhad probably misreported their wages, it did not count such workers as being paid less than the minimum wage. The analysis does not account for localities minimum wages because it uses data from the CPS, which does not identify the localities in which respondents work. 5. Department of Labor, Wages and Hours Worked: Minimum Wage and Overtime Pay (accessed January 23, 2014), www.dol.gov/compliance/guide/minwage.htm.
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federal minimum in 2016. Those effects could be positive or negative for any particular worker, depending on whether that workers value to a firm would be higher or lower if lower-wage workers became more expensive to employ. Available research, however, suggests that the average effect on the wages of those workers would be positive. (See Appendix B for a list of studies that CBO reviewed.) In its analysis, CBO assumed that such ripple effects would probably apply to workers whose projected wage in 2016 was up to the amount that would result from an increase that was 50 percent larger than the increase in their effective minimum wage (incorporating both their state minimum and the new federal minimum) under either option. Thus, in states where the current minimum wage is $7.25, CBO anticipates that workers earning up to about $11.50 per hour would probably be affected by the $10.10 option. In states with a higher minimum wage, the ripple effect would be much smaller. For instance, under current California law, the minimum wage is scheduled to increase to $10.00 in 2016, and in that state, only workers earning up to $10.15 per hour would probably be affected by an increase to $10.10 in the federal minimum, by CBOs estimate. Ripple effects added 8.0 million potentially affected workers to CBOs analysis under the $10.10 option and 4.1 million under the $9.00 option. Although CBO estimates that wage increases under the options are much more likely for those workers than for workers with still higher wages, the agency does not expect that all of them would receive wage increases. CBO did not have a basis for estimating the total number of workers whose earnings would rise, although that number would be less than the total number of potentially affected workers.
unaffected workers as affected and vice versa; similarly, the use of occupation to classify people as tipped workers results in inaccuracies.6 Third, changes in states minimum wages could be different from what CBO projects. Fourth, the ripple effects could be smaller or larger than CBO projects.
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would tend to lower employment. On the other hand, some firms would probably employ more workers with wages higher than the new minimum, because the productivity of those workers relative to their wages would be higher than that of workers whose wages had been pushed up by the minimum-wage increase.
Second, CBO considered the role of publication bias in its analysis. Academic journals tend to publish studies whose reported effects can be distinguished from no effect with a sufficient degree of statistical precision. According to some analyses of the minimum-wage literature, an unexpectedly large number of studies report a negative effect on employment with a degree of precision just above conventional thresholds for publication. That would suggest that journals failure to publish studies finding weak effects of minimum-wage changes on employment may have led to a published literature skewed toward stronger effects. CBO therefore located its range of plausible elasticities slightly closer to zerothat is, indicating a weaker effect on employmentthan it would have otherwise. Third, CBO considered whether economic conditions in 2016 could lead the responsiveness of employment to an increase in the minimum wage to be larger than it had been in the past. One recent study has found evidence that the employment elasticity is more negative when unemployment is high. However, CBO projects a national unemployment rate of about 6 percent for 2016a rate similar to the average of unemployment rates during the periods studied in the literature from which CBO drew elasticity estimates.7 CBO therefore did not adjust its central elasticity estimates to account for economic conditions in 2016. However, the extent to which employment would respond to changes in the minimum wage in 2016 in the same way that it has in past years is uncertain. For example, the relatively slow growth in the wages of low-wage workers observed in the past few decades has been partly attributed by many analysts to growth in information and other technologies, which have automated some of the tasks traditionally done by those workers. Continued improvements in such technology will probably lead to the automation of some other tasks that they still perform, such as payment collection at retail stores. The pace of technological innovation, though, is difficult to predict. Uncertainty about future developments in the labor market is reflected in CBOs range of estimates.
7. See Congressional Budget Office, The Budget and Economic Outlook: 2014 to 2024 (February 2014), www.cbo.gov/ publication/45010. For additional information about CBOs projections of future labor market conditions, see Congressional Budget Office, The Slow Recovery of the Labor Market (February 2014), www.cbo.gov/publication/45011.
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23
Fourth, the $10.10 option would apply to a larger fraction of the workforceone that accounts for about 10 percent of all hours worked, CBO projectsthan many previous increases did. It would do so not only because the percentage increase is large, but also because the minimum wage before the increase would be higher in real (inflation-adjusted) terms than it was before many previous increases (see Figure 1 on page 5).10 For example, although the percentage increase in the federal minimum wage from 2007 to 2009 was similar to the one projected under the $10.10 option, the fraction of the workforce affected under that option would be about five times as large (see Table A-1).11 When a greater proportion of a firms work hours are affected by the minimum wage, the adjustment cost per worker of reducing staffing (again, especially if the firm is restructuring its operations) is probably smaller, making the firm more likely to reduce employment.
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Table A-1.
Comparing Changes in the Federal Minimum Wage Since 1980 With Changes Under the Two Options
Year of the Minimum-Wage Increasea Percentage of Workers Earning Between the Old and New Minimum Wages Changes Since 1980 Percentage of Hours Worked by Workers Earning Between the Old and New Minimum Wages
2015 2016
Average
3.9 7.7
5.8 Projected Changes Under the $10.10 Option c
2.3 5.7
4.0
Source: Congressional Budget Office based on the Census Bureaus Current Population Survey and on data from the Department of Labor. Note: For the analysis in this table, to create a consistent series over time, CBO focused on groups of workers earning between the old minimum wage and the new minimum wage that was scheduled to take effect within a year. To allow for some misreporting of wages, workers earning slightly below the old minimum wage were also included. The hours worked were those reported prior to the increase in the minimum wage. Those groups of workers differ from the groups of directly affected workers under the options discussed elsewhere in this report because they do not account for any wage growth, within the year prior to the new minimum wages taking effect, that would have occurred if the minimum wage had not been raised, or for increases in state minimum wages that would have increased workers wages during the period. a. The amendments to the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 mandating the minimum wage increases for these years were enacted in 1977, 1989, 1996, and 2007. b. The minimum wage would rise (in three steps, starting in 2014) to $10.10 by July 1, 2016, and then be indexed to inflation. c. The minimum wage would rise (in two steps, starting in 2015) to $9.00 by July 1, 2016, and would not be subsequently indexed to inflation.
converted the elasticity estimates that it drew from the literature on teenage workers to elasticity estimates for directly affected teenagers and adults. Elasticities for Directly Affected Teenagers. The research discussed above typically defines employment elasticity (e) as the responsiveness in the employment ( % E ) of a group of workers, such as teenagers, to a change in the applicable minimum wage ( % MW that is, the CBO
change in the federal or state minimum, whichever is higher), as shown in the following equation: %E e literature = ------------------% MW The elasticity ranges reported earlier in this appendix are based on that approach so that they will be more easily comparable to the elasticities typically reported in the research literature. In its calculations, however, CBO used
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elasticities that were modified in two ways to be more accurate estimates of the effect of the options. The first modification that CBO made arose because the literature typically focuses on the historical employment response of all teenagers to a change in the minimum wage. Many of those teenagers initially had low wages and, when the minimum wage rose, received a wage increase (or were rendered jobless); but many other teenagers had wages that were higher than the new minimum and therefore were largely unaffected by the change. In contrast, CBOs approach examines the responsiveness of employment of only directly affected teenagers to a change in the minimum wagethat is, the responsiveness of employment of those who would otherwise earn less than the new minimum wage. When analyzing the $10.10 option, for example, CBOs approach focuses on the responsiveness of teenage workers who would have earned less than $10.10 per hour in 2016 if the option had not been implemented. The two approaches are similar, but they can yield different results when the fraction of teenagers with low wages varies over time and with policy changes. In CBOs view, an approach that focuses on the response of low-wage workers is more accurate. The second modification that CBO made was to use elasticities that relate employment not to changes in the minimum wage itself but to average changes in workers wages induced by a change in the minimum wage. (For instance, a worker who would otherwise have earned $9.00 per hour would receive a 12 percent increase if the minimum wage rose to $10.10. However, the minimum wage for that worker would rise from $7.25 to $10.10, an increase of 39 percent.) The elasticities that are typically reported in the literature are scaled to the increase in the minimum wage itselfbut for two reasons, an approach relying on them is not as well suited for projecting the change in employment resulting from a future change in the minimum wage. First, that approach does not incorporate information about the distribution of workers wages. For example, in a projection of the effect of the $10.10 option, it would make no difference, under that approach, whether most workers would otherwise have earned $7.25 or $10.09. Second, that approach regards all directly affected workers as equally likely to lose their jobs after a minimum-wage increase, no matter what they would otherwise have been paid. In CBOs view, by contrast, workers whose wages are just below the new minimum wage are more likely to remain employed after
it increases than workers who are earning substantially less and are probably less valuable to the employer. CBOs approach accounts for the distribution of workers wages and for the difference in the likelihood of losing ones job. CBO calculated the responsiveness of employment among directly affected teenagers by dividing the elasticities drawn from the literature by the portion of employed teenagers who would earn less than the new minimum wage before its implementation ( p direct ) and then multiplying by the ratio of the percentage change in the applicable minimum wage ( % MW ) to the average percentage change in the wages of those teenagers ( % W direct ).12 The following equation shows the calculation: % E direct e literature % MW e direct ----------------------- = ---------------- ----------------------% W direct p direct % W direct CBO calculated those conversion factors using CPS data from 1979 through 2009. The CPS data indicate that past increases in the minimum wage typically affected about a third of employed teenagers and were typically about 50 percent higher than the average of the wage changes necessary for compliance with the new minimum. Thus, elasticities for directly affected teenagers are about 4.5 times higher, CBO estimates, than the teenemployment elasticities with respect to the change in the applicable minimum wage discussed in the previous section. Elasticities for Directly Affected Adults. Much less research has been conducted on the responsiveness of adult employment to minimum-wage increases than on the responsiveness of teenage employment. Using the available information, CBO concluded that the elasticity for directly affected adults was about one-third of the elasticity for directly affected teenagers, and the agency
12. A similar conversion was used in Charles Brown, Minimum Wages, Employment, and the Distribution of Income, in Orley Ashenfelter and David Card, eds., Handbook of Labor Economics, vol. 3B (Elsevier, 1999), pp. 21012163, http://tinyurl.com/ omxr3p7, and in David Neumark and William L. Wascher, Minimum Wages (MIT Press, 2008), http://mitpress.mit.edu/ books/minimum-wages. The conversion relies on the assertion that the increase in the minimum wage does not have a net effect on employment for workers earning more than the new minimum wage. As discussed earlier, CBO concluded that the research supports that assertion, with the exception of the increase in employment that would result from greater overall demand for goods and services. The adjustment made to account for that increase in employment is discussed in the section How CBO Estimated the Total Effects of the Options on Employment.
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applied that proportional adjustment to the central estimates and likely ranges of elasticities for teens discussed above. Some studies have found large elasticities for particular groups of adults, such as high school dropouts or African Americans in their 20s, but most of the adults who would be affected by the $9.00 and $10.10 options would not fall into those categories. A study that tracked directly affected adults regardless of their education, age, or race suggests that their employment is less sensitive to increases in the minimum wage than that of directly affected teenagers. One explanation for that lower degree of responsiveness is that employers facing an excess of workers or of job applicants tend to favor adults over teenagers. Supporting that explanation is research suggesting that encouraging employment among low-wage parents reduces employment among younger, childless adults. CBO also reviewed studies that examined the response of employment to changes in the minimum wage for other groups of workers, such as those in particular industries. Those results were broadly consistent with CBOs findings for teenagers and adults after being adjusted to avoid apples-to-oranges comparisons. For example, several studies of the food and drink industry measured elasticities in terms of the change in all employment in the industry stemming from a change in the applicable minimum wage. Many of the employees at those businesses did not have wages low enough to be directly affected by a minimum-wage change; that factor largely accounts for differences between the smaller elasticities typically reported in studies of the food-and-drink industry and CBOs estimates of elasticities for directly affected workers.
the total effect on employment, CBO multiplied estimates of the first three factors together for teenagers; did the same for adults; added the results; and then added an amount to account for the fourth factor. To reflect the considerable uncertainty in estimating the total employment effect, CBO also reported a range within which, in the agencys assessment, there was about a two-thirds chance that the actual effect would lie.
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27
On balance, according to CBOs analysis, raising the minimum wage would increase demand for goods and services because, taken together, the second, third, and fourth direct effects would shift income from business owners and consumers (as a whole) to low-wage workers. Low-wage workers generally spend a larger share of each dollar they receive than the average business owner or consumer does; thus, when a dollar from business owners or consumers is shifted to low-wage workers, overall spending increases. The increase in demand from that shifting of income would be larger than the decrease in demand from the reduced consumption of people who became jobless, CBO estimates. Increasing the minimum wage would also have indirect effects on demand that could either enhance or reduce the direct effects. For instance, the greater demand for goods and services just described would prompt some companies to increase investment to bolster their future production, further boosting demand. But higher prices of goods and services sold by companies employing minimum-wage workers would cause consumers to shift their purchases to other companies, potentially creating bottlenecks until those companies adjusted to the increased demand. On net, the indirect effects would reduce demand, according to CBOs central estimates. (Under current conditions, the indirect effects would increase demand, CBO estimates, but they would reduce demand in 2016 because the economy will be stronger and the Federal Reserve would therefore be more active in offsetting the direct increase in demand by raising interest rates.) The increased demand for goods and services that would result from an increase in the minimum wage would have a short-term impact, boosting employment by a few tens of thousands of workers in the second half of 2016 under the $10.10 option, CBO estimates. The agencys estimation approach was similar to the one that it used to assess the effects of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA) and of various policies designed to increase output and employmentbut adjusted to account for the much stronger economy projected for late 2016.13 Specifically, CBO estimated the impact of both the $10.10 option and the $9.00 option on demand while accounting for both the direct and indirect effects. Then CBO estimated the effect of those changes in demand on productivity, hours worked per worker, and employment, using historical relationships as a guide. Changes in demand would affect employment gradually,
over several quarters, because part of a rise in output would initially result in higher productivity and hours worked per worker, rather than in increased employment. The overall increase in demand from boosting the minimum wage, and the resulting increase in employment, are represented in the findings of most previous research only to a small extent. For example, a study of impacts on directly affected workers captures the macroeconomic effects only on those workers, not on all workers. Also, a study of a minimum-wage increase in a given state may capture its effects on demand for in-state goods but not for out-of-state goods. After analyzing the importance of such factors, CBO concluded that previous research incorporated roughly 10 percent of the overall effects on aggregate demand. CBO therefore reduced its estimate of the economywide demand effects of a minimum-wage increase by about 10 percent to avoid double-counting those effects.
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using methods similar to those that it used in its analysis of ARRA.14 Building on those ranges of wage growth, elasticities, and aggregate demand effects, CBO generated simulations of effects on employment that incorporated the likelihood that wage growth could be higher or lower by a certain amount, the likelihood that elasticities could be larger or smaller to a certain extent, and other sources of uncertainty. CBO used the results of those estimates to form a range for the effect on employment of each policy option. There is a two-thirds chance, in CBOs assessment, that the actual effects would be within the ranges reported.
ASEC. Workers hourly wages were calculated as their annual earnings divided by the number of hours they worked during the year (calculated as the number of hours they usually worked per week times the number of weeks they worked during the year).15 As in its analysis of employment, CBO adjusted workers calculated wages up or down to move their wage toward the average wage for workers with similar observable characteristics. However, when CBO used those data to project workers wages in 2016, it found far fewer workers who would be directly affected by the change in the minimum wage than it had in its analysis of employment.16 The discrepancy probably arose because of greater measurement error in the ASEC than in the monthly CPS, which reports wages according to peoples responses to a direct question about how much they earn per hour. CBO therefore further adjusted the distribution of hourly wages calculated from the ASEC to match more closely the analogous distribution from the monthly CPS, mostly by adjusting some workers wages up to the minimum wage projected to apply to them in 2016 under current law.17 CBO also used the ASEC to measure the distribution of before-tax family cash income in 2012, which is the measure that the Census Bureau uses to determine the official poverty rate. That measure of income includes labor earnings, capital and business income, and other private sources of income, as well as cash transfers from the government, such as Supplemental Security Income (SSI) and Social Security (both Old-Age and Survivors
15. CBO did not exclude observations for which the Census Bureau imputed annual earnings, the number of hours of work per week, or the number of weeks worked per year. 16. To be consistent with the analysis of the number of workers affected by an increase in the minimum wage, CBO identified nontipped workers who were paid up to 25 cents less and tipped workers who were paid up to 13 cents less than the federal minimum wageor the state minimum if it was higheras workers who would be affected by a change in the minimum wage. 17. As it did in estimating the number of affected workers, CBO identified tipped workers as those in 11 occupations (such as waiter, bartender, and hairdresser) whose compensation depends heavily on tips. Throughout its analysis, CBO applied to those workers the lower minimum wage for tipped workers.
CBO
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Insurance and Disability Insurance payments).18 It does not include noncash government transfers, such as benefits provided through the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), Medicaid, or Medicare, nor does it reflect the taxes people pay or the tax credits they receive, such as the earned income tax credit (EITC). Projecting Hourly Wages and Annual Family Income in 2016. CBO used the calculations described above and its forecasts of growth in wages and other income to project the distribution of hourly wages and annual family income in 2016.19 As in the employment analysis, the forecast of wage growth used for this analysis was smaller than the agencys overall forecast of wage growth because CBO expects that very high-wage workers will experience faster wage growth in the next several years than other workers will.20 In addition, CBO accounted for prospective increases in some states minimum wages, including changes scheduled in current state laws and changes projected on the basis of how states have changed their minimum wages in the past. To project family income in 2016, CBO used its forecasts of growth in the components of income when they were availableas they were for interest and dividends, for example. CBO projected that the other components of income will grow at the same rate that the price index for personal consumption expenditures does in CBOs forecast. CBO estimated that the number of workers will increase according to the agencys forecast of employment growth between 2013 and 2016. The rate of growth in the number of nonworking family members was similarly matched to the agencys forecasts of growth in the nonworking population.
18. Specifically, before-tax family cash income includes wage and salary earnings; pension or retirement income; income from selfemployment, Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF), Supplemental Security Income, Social Security, child support, unemployment compensation, workers compensation, disability benefits, educational assistance, and financial assistance from outside the household; and other cash income. 19. See Congressional Budget Office, The Budget and Economic Outlook: 2014 to 2024 (February 2014), www.cbo.gov/ publication/45010. 20. In addition, the Affordable Care Acts requirement that many employers provide health insurance (or pay a penalty if they do not) will impose an additional cost on employers for some lowwage workers who do not currently have employment-based health insurance. CBO expects that the cost will ultimately be borne by workers through lower wages.
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hourly wage less than the new minimum. Workers who would have had wages between the new minimum and $11.50 were not considered to be at risk of losing employment as a result of the minimum-wage increase, as discussed above. The reductions in employment would be concentrated more among teenage workers than among older workers, CBO expects, both because they tend to have lower wages and because their employment typically responds more sharply to changes in the minimum wage (as discussed above). Among workers at least 20 years old, CBO anticipates that the reductions in employment would be disproportionately concentrated among those who would have had the lowest wages under current law (apart from those to whom the minimum wage would not apply). Because many low-wage workers move in and out of employment within a year, CBO estimated the effects of the employment loss among low-wage workers by assuming that the affected people worked, on average, about half as many weeks as they otherwise would have; CBO therefore lowered projected earnings by 50 percent for twice as many workers as the projected number of people who would become jobless (rather than lowering earnings by 100 percent for a number of workers equal to the number of people who would become jobless). Changes in the Annual Income of Families. An increase in the minimum wage would not only affect family income by changing workers earnings. It would also result in losses in income for business owners, decreases in real income for many people because of increases in prices, and increases in some peoples income generated by higher demand for goods and services. To determine the economywide effect on total income, CBO subtracted the output lost because of the decline in employment from the output gained because of the increase in the aggregate demand for goods and services. On balance, the total amount of real income in the economy would increase by $2 billion in 2016 under the $10.10 option, CBO projects, and by $1 billion under the $9.00 option. In CBOs estimation, overall real income would increase for families with income less than six times the poverty threshold but would decrease for higher-income families, because both the income losses for business owners and the increase in prices would have the greatest effects on those higher-income families. In CBOs estimation, about 1 percent of the reduction in real income from those two factors would fall on people living in families
whose income was below the poverty threshold, whereas about 70 percent would fall on people living in families whose income was more than six times the poverty threshold. CBO used those estimates of the change in income for families to project how many families would move into and out of poverty.21 Following the official definition of poverty, CBO did not consider the effects of a minimumwage increase on taxes, tax credits, or noncash transfer payments in its calculations. (CBO has not analyzed the effects of minimum-wage increases on a measure of income that accounts for taxes, tax credits, or noncash transfers.) Some of those effects would partly offset the gain to families from a higher minimum wage. For example, workers who received higher wages because of an increase in the minimum wage would pay more payroll taxes (though they would later be eligible for more Social Security benefits), and some of their families would be eligible to receive less in noncash means-tested benefits, such as those provided by SNAP. The amount of the EITC received by workers in poor families would increase in some cases and decrease in others, depending on each workers earnings and family income.
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31
profit reductions and price increases by firms paying increased wages, and the magnitude of indirect effects on demand.
It is uncertain how the reduction in employment resulting from a minimum-wage increase would be distributed among families during 2016. In its analysis, CBO distributed that employment reduction among families on the basis of the age and the wages under current law of the workers who live in those families. Alternative distributions would produce different effects on family income and poverty. The effect of a higher minimum wage on the behavior of other people who live in low-wage workers families is uncertain. For example, someone in that situation might work fewer hours in response to a spouses higher earningsor more hours, if the spouse lost employment as a result of the higher minimum wage. In general, such responses would probably offset to some extent the effects of the options on low-wage workers family income.
wages and employment (and then earnings and family income). CBO then projected the effect on the poverty rate by comparing each familys poverty status under current law with its poverty status under the two options. An alternative approach to forecasting the effect of a minimum-wage increase on poverty rates is to estimate the historical correlation between the poverty rate and the minimum wage and to use that correlation to project a change in the poverty rate for a given change in the minimum wage. Some of the estimates produced by studies taking that approach would imply that the $10.10 policy would reduce poverty by more than CBO has estimated. (See Appendix B for examples of such studies.) There are several reasons that the two approaches may yield different results. It might be, for example, that CBOs analysis underestimates the increase in income that would accrue to poor families if the minimum wage was increased. That underestimate might occur if the minimum wage raised earnings for workers projected to have wages above the new minimum by more than CBO has estimated. It might also be that an increase in the minimum wage would alter family structurethrough increased marriage rates, for examplein ways that reduced the number of families whose income was below the poverty threshold; such effects would be captured in the historical correlation approach but not in CBOs simulation approach. Alternatively, the effect on poverty of a minimum-wage increase might vary over timefor example, if the number of low-wage workers in families with income near the poverty threshold varied over time. If that was true, the correlation analysis might be less informative than CBOs simulation method, which uses more current data.
CBO
To develop its estimates of the effects of minimumwage increases on employment and family income, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) drew on the following research.
Discussion Paper 7638 (Institute for the Study of Labor, September 2013), http://tinyurl.com/ld9rwmg; and David Neumark and William L. Wascher, Minimum Wages and Employment, Foundations and Trends in Microeconomics, vol. 3, no. 12 (March 2007), pp. 1182, http://tinyurl.com/o7cngec. For a review of the literature on the effect of Britains minimum wage (which was introduced in 1999), see Low Pay Commission, National Minimum Wage, Report 2013 (April 2013), Chapter 2, pp. 1974, http://tinyurl.com/ m6bbe93. For a review of the literature on mechanisms that might explain small employment effects, see John Schmitt, Why Does the Minimum Wage Have No Discernible Effect on Employment? (Center for Economic and Policy Research, February 2013), http://tinyurl.com/b54lk8m. For a literature review that covers a variety of effects, including the effects found in other countries, see David Neumark and William L. Wascher, Minimum Wages (MIT Press, 2008), http://mitpress.mit.edu/books/ minimum-wages. For reviews of that book, see Arindrajit Dube, Minimum Wages. By David Neumark and William L. Wascher, Journal of Economic Literature, vol. 49, no. 3 (September 2011), http://dx.doi.org/10.1257/jel.49.3.719.r18; and Richard V. Burkhauser, Minimum Wages. By David Neumark and William L. Wascher, Industrial and Labor Relations Review, vol. 64, no. 1 (September 2010), pp. 202203, http://tinyurl.com/o3gy5bg.
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For a review of the research literature before 1999, see Charles Brown, Minimum Wages, Employment, and the Distribution of Income, in Orley C. Ashenfelter and David Card, eds., Handbook of Labor Economics, vol. 3, part B (Elsevier, 1999), pp. 21012163, http://tinyurl.com/mmkdrme. For an early review of the literature from an international perspective, see Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, Making the Most of the Minimum: Statutory Minimum Wages, Employment and Poverty, in OECD Employment Outlook 1998Towards an Employment-Centred Social Policy (OECD Directorate for Labour and Social Affairs, June 1998), Chapter 2, http:// tinyurl.com/q6rs9a2. For an early review of the new minimum-wage research from the first half of the 1990s, see David Card and Alan B. Krueger, Myth and Measurement: The New Economics of the Minimum Wage (Princeton University Press, 1995), http://press.princeton.edu/titles/5632.html. For a very early review of the literature, see Charles Brown, Curtis Gilroy, and Andrew Kohen, The Effect of the Minimum Wage on Employment and Unemployment, Journal of Economic Literature, vol. 20, no. 2 (June 1982), pp. 487528, www.jstor.org/stable/ 2724487.
Sylvia A. Allegretto, Arindrajit Dube, and Michael Reich, Do Minimum Wages Really Reduce Teen Employment? Accounting for Heterogeneity and Selectivity in State Panel Data, Industrial Relations, vol. 50, no. 2 (April 2011), pp. 205240, http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ j.1468-232X.2011.00634.x. For a recent study that focuses on how the effects of minimum-wage increases vary with economic conditions, see John T. Addison, McKinley L. Blackburn, and Chad D. Cotti, Minimum Wage Increases in a Recessionary Environment, Labour Economics, vol. 23 (August 2013), pp. 3039, http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/ j.labeco.2013.02.004. For analyses of changes in employment in industries where low wages are prevalent, see William E. Even and David A. Macpherson, The Effect of the Tipped Minimum Wage on Employees in the U.S. Restaurant Industry, Southern Economic Journal, vol. 80, no. 3 (January 2014), pp. 633655, http://tinyurl.com/ kv6fz6c; Jonathan Meer and Jeremy West, Effects of the Minimum Wage on Employment Dynamics (draft, Texas A&M University, December 2013), http://tinyurl.com/cllro5p (PDF, 2.9 MB). Arindrajit Dube, Minimum Wages and Aggregate Job Growth: Causal Effect or Statistical Artifact? Discussion Paper 7674 (Institute for the Study of Labor, October 2013), http://tinyurl.com/kx6t2yz; David Neumark, J. M. Ian Salas, and William Wascher, Revisiting the Minimum Wage-Employment Debate: Throwing Out the Baby With the Bathwater? Working Paper 18681 (National Bureau of Economic Research, January 2013), www.nber.org/papers/w18681; John T. Addison, McKinley L. Blackburn, and Chad D. Cotti, The Effect of Minimum Wages on Labour Market Outcomes: County-Level Estimates from the Restaurant-and-Bar Sector, British Journal of Industrial Relations, vol. 50, no. 3 (September 2012), pp. 412435, http://tinyurl.com/ot9apya; and Arindrajit Dube, T. William Lester, and Michael Reich, Minimum Wage Effects Across State Borders: Estimates Using Contiguous Counties, Review of Economics and Statistics, vol. 92, no. 4 (November 2010), pp. 945964, http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/rest_a_00039.
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For recent studies that examine changes in employment among a variety of groups that earn low wages, on average, see Arindrajit Dube, T. William Lester, and Michael Reich, Minimum Wage Shocks, Employment Flows and Labor Market Frictions, Working Paper 149-13 (Institute for Research on Labor and Employment, June 2013), www.irle.berkeley.edu/workingpapers/149-13.pdf (3.4 MB); and Joseph J. Sabia, Richard V. Burkhauser, and Benjamin Hansen, Are the Effects of Minimum Wage Increases Always Small? New Evidence From a Case Study of New York State, Industrial and Labor Relations Review, vol. 65, no. 2 (April 2012), pp. 350376, http:// tinyurl.com/mn566b3. For examples of earlier studies about effects on adults with low wages, see David Neumark, Mark Schweitzer, and William Wascher, Minimum Wage Effects Throughout the Wage Distribution, Journal of Human Resources, vol. 39, no. 2 (Spring 2004), pp. 425450, http://tinyurl.com/ncgswlg; David Neumark, The Employment Effects of Minimum Wages: Evidence From a Prespecified Research Design, Industrial Relations, vol. 40, no. 1 (January 2001), pp. 121144, http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/0019-8676.00199; Richard V. Burkhauser, Kenneth A. Couch, and David C. Wittenburg, Who Minimum Wage Increases Bite: An Analysis Using Monthly Data From the SIPP and the CPS, Southern Economic Journal, vol. 67, no. 1 (July 2000), pp. 1640, www.jstor.org/stable/1061611; and Donald Deere, Kevin M. Murphy, and Finis Welch, Employment and the 19901991 Minimum-Wage Hike, American Economic Review, vol. 85, no. 2 (May 1995), pp. 232237, www.jstor.org/stable/2117924. For examples of research on the long-term effects of changes in minimum wages, see Isaac Sorkin, Are There Long-Run Effects of the Minimum Wage? (draft, University of Michigan, October 2013), https://sites.google.com/site/isaacsorkin/papers; Dale L. Belman and Paul Wolfson, The Effect of Legislated Minimum Wage Increases on Employment and Hours: A Dynamic Analysis, Labour, vol. 24, no. 1 (March 2010), pp. 125, http://tinyurl.com/nhp7mth; and
Michael Baker, Dwayne Benjamin, and Shuchita Stanger, The Highs and Lows of the Minimum Wage Effect: A Time-Series Cross-Section Study of the Canadian Law, Journal of Labor Economics, vol. 17, no. 2 (April 1999), pp. 318350, http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/209923. For a reexamination of earlier research using time series methods, see Nicolas Williams and Jeffrey A. Mills, The Minimum Wage and Teenage Employment: Evidence From Time Series, Applied Economics, vol. 33, no. 3 (February 2001), pp. 285300, http://dx.doi.org/ 10.1080/00036840122088.
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Richard V. Burkhauser and Joseph J. Sabia, The Effectiveness of Minimum-Wage Increases in Reducing Poverty: Past, Present, and Future, Contemporary Economic Policy, vol. 25, no. 2 (April 2007), pp. 262281, http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ j.1465-7287.2006.00045.x; Congressional Budget Office, Response to a Request by Senator Grassley About the Effects of Increasing the Federal Minimum Wage Versus Expanding the Earned Income Tax Credit (attachment to a letter to the Honorable Charles E. Grassley, January 9, 2007), www.cbo.gov/publication/ 18281; David Neumark, Mark Schweitzer, and William Wascher, Minimum Wage Effects Throughout the Wage Distribution, Journal of Human Resources, vol. 39, no. 2 (Spring 2004), pp. 425450, http://tinyurl.com/ ncgswlg; Craig Gundersen and James P. Ziliak, Poverty and Macroeconomic Performance Across Space, Race, and Family Structure, Demography, vol. 41, no. 1 (February 2004), pp. 6186, http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/ dem.2004.0004; David Neumark and William Wascher, Do Minimum Wages Fight Poverty? Economic Inquiry, vol. 40, no. 3 (July 2002), pp. 315333, http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ei/ 40.3.315; David R. Morgan and Kenneth Kickham, Children in Poverty: Do State Policies Matter? Social Science Quarterly, vol. 82, no. 3 (September 2001), pp. 478493, http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/0038-4941.00037; Lonnie K. Stevans and David N. Sessions, Minimum Wage Policy and Poverty in the United States, International Review of Applied Economics, vol. 15, no. 1 (2001), pp. 6575, http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/ 02692170120013358; John T. Addison and McKinley L. Blackburn, Minimum Wages and Poverty, Industrial and Labor Relations Review, vol. 52, no. 3 (April 1999), pp. 393 409, www.jstor.org/stable/2525141; and David Card and Alan B. Krueger, Myth and Measurement: The New Economics of the Minimum Wage (Princeton University Press, 1995), http://press.princeton.edu/titles/ 5632.html. CBO
For related analyses of wage and employment spillovers from increases in minimum wages, see David Lee and Emmanuel Saez, Optimal Minimum Wage Policy in Competitive Labor Markets, Journal of Public Economics, vol. 96, no. 910 (October 2012), pp. 739749, http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jpubeco.2012.06.001; Joseph J. Sabia, Richard V. Burkhauser, and Benjamin Hansen, Are the Effects of Minimum Wage Increases Always Small? New Evidence From a Case Study of New York State, Industrial and Labor Relations Review, vol. 65, no. 2 (April 2012), pp. 350376, http://tinyurl.com/mn566b3; David H. Autor, Alan Manning, and Christopher L. Smith, The Contribution of the Minimum Wage to U.S. Wage Inequality Over Three Decades: A Reassessment, Working Paper 16533 (National Bureau of Economic Research, November 2010), www.nber.org/ papers/w16533; David Lee, Wage Inequality in the United States During the 1980s: Rising Dispersion or Falling Minimum Wage? Quarterly Journal of Economics, vol. 114, no. 3 (August 1999), http://qje.oxfordjournals.org/content/ 114/3.toc; and Charles Brown, Minimum Wage Laws: Are They Overrated? Journal of Economic Perspectives, vol. 2, no. 3 (Summer 1988), pp. 133145, http://dx.doi.org/ 10.1257/jep.2.3.133.
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For a review of the literature on the implications of technological change for low-wage workers, see Daron Acemoglu and David Autor, Skills, Tasks and Technologies: Implications for Employment and Earnings, in David Card and Orley C. Ashenfelter, eds., Handbook of Labor Economics, vol. 4, part B (Elsevier, 2011), pp. 10431171, http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/ S0169-7218(11)02410-5. For research about fringe-benefit effects, see Brooks Pierce, Recent Trends in Compensation Inequality, in Katharine G. Abraham, James R. Spletzer, and Michael Harper, eds., Labor in the New Economy (University of Chicago Press, 2010), pp. 6398, http://papers.nber.org/ books/abra08-1;
Kosali Ilayperuma Simon and Robert Kaestner, Do Minimum Wages Affect Non-Wage Job Attributes? Evidence on Fringe Benefits, Industrial and Labor Relations Review, vol. 58, no. 1 (October 2004), pp. 5270, http://tinyurl.com/o8lrxjh; and Masanori Hashimoto, Minimum Wage Effects on Training on the Job, American Economic Review, vol. 72, no. 5 (December 1982), pp. 10701087, www.jstor.org/ stable/1812023.
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Figures
1. Workers Hourly Wages and the Federal Minimum Wage, 1973 to 2018 2. Shares of All Workers, by States Applicable Minimum Wage, 2014 3. Estimated Effects on Real Family Income of an Increase in the Federal Minimum Wage, Second Half of 2016 5 6 12
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CBO