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Fact Sheet: The Economic Case for Increasing the Minimum Wage: State by State Impact

March 19, 2014

The minimum wage is a critical tool for ensuring that hard work is rewarded with fair pay, but its real value has been allowed to erode substantially despite decades of economic growth. The president believes raising the minimum wage will help ensure opportunity for all Americans, and that's why he has led by example signing an Executive Order to raise the minimum wage to $10.10 for new federal contract workers. Now Congress should act to raise the minimum wage for all workers and pass the Harkin/Miller bill which would raise incomes for millions of Americans in every state and reduce poverty.

In real terms, the minimum wage is worth less today than it was at the beginning of 1950.

  • Since 1950, real per capita gross domestic product (GDP) has increased 246 percent, and labor productivity has grown 278 percent, but the minimum wage's real value has fallen.
  • Relative to the mean wage, the minimum wage peaked in 1968 at 54 percent but had fallen to only 35 percent in February 2014.

If no action is taken, the real value of the minimum wage will decline even further.

  • In 2014 alone, the minimum wage is projected to lose 1.7 percent of its value. For a full-time worker, that represents nearly $250, enough to pay for a month of groceries or a month of utilities.
  • Over the next five years, the real value of the minimum wage is projected to decline by 10 percent, or over $1,400 dollars of purchasing power for a full-time worker.
  • Increasing the purchasing power of minimum wage workers helps stimulate the economy. Research has shown that these workers spend the additional income they receive when the minimum wage is increased.

Over 28 million workers would benefit from the Harkin-Miller proposal to increase the minimum wage to $10.10 an hour.

  • Women (55 percent) and people with family income below $35,000 (46 percent) would make up substantial shares of the beneficiaries. One quarter of potential beneficiaries are caring for children.
  • The vast majority of people who would see their wages go up are adults in the prime of their working years, not teenagers, as some have claimed. Only 12 percent of beneficiaries would be under 20 years old.
  • About 12 million people in poverty would see their families' incomes increase due to this proposal. It would lift 2 million of those people out of poverty.
  • At least 30,000 workers in every state would benefit from raising the Harkin-Miller proposal. In eighteen states, at least half a million workers will benefit.

Number of Workers Benefiting from Increasing the Minimum Wage to $10.10, by State


State

Number

Affected

State

Number

Affected

Alabama

482,900

Montana

96,800

Alaska

46,400

Nebraska

216,400

Arizona

541,000

Nevada

253,000

Arkansas

313,600

New Hampshire

108,500

California

2,161,300

New Jersey

803,200

Colorado

416,900

New Mexico

197,900

Connecticut

228,400

New York

1,705,800

Delaware

83,200

North Carolina

1,065,000

District of Columbia

33,000

North Dakota

64,200

Florida

1,732,000

Ohio

1,075,200

Georgia

963,900

Oklahoma

397,600

Hawaii

118,200

Oregon

257,400

Idaho

176,000

Pennsylvania

1,133,900

Illinois

1,122,400

Rhode Island

89,300

Indiana

666,000

South Carolina

481,800

Iowa

332,600

South Dakota

93,400

Kansas

314,700

Tennessee

669,500

Kentucky

497,500

Texas

2,982,100

Louisiana

500,200

Utah

303,800

Maine

134,800

Vermont

38,300

Maryland

466,000

Virginia

717,200

Massachusetts

453,100

Washington

393,300

Michigan

972,100

West Virginia

179,700

Minnesota

493,500

Wisconsin

595,700

Mississippi

292,800

Wyoming

52,800

Missouri

599,600

Total

28,113,400

Source: 2013 Current Population Survey and CEA calculations

Barack Obama, Fact Sheet: The Economic Case for Increasing the Minimum Wage: State by State Impact Online by Gerhard Peters and John T. Woolley, The American Presidency Project https://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/node/322829

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