The Costs & Consequences Of $15/Hour

Authored by Lance Roberts via RealInvestmentAdvice.com,

In 2016, I first touched on the impacts of hiking the minimum wage.

“What’s the big ‘hub-bub’ over raising the minimum wage to $15/hr? After all, the last time the minimum wage was raised was in 2009.

According to the April 2015, BLS report the numbers were quite underwhelming:

‘In 2014, 77.2 million workers age 16 and older in the United States were paid at hourly rates,representing 58.7 percent of all wage and salary workers. Among those paid by the hour, 1.3 million earned exactly the prevailing federal minimum wage of $7.25 per hour. About 1.7 million had wages below the federal minimum.

Together, these 3.0 million workers with wages at or below the federal minimum made up 3.9 percent of all hourly-paid workers. Of those 3 million workers, who were at or below the Federal minimum wage, 48.2% of that group were aged 16-24. Most importantly, the percentage of hourly paid workers earning the prevailing federal minimum wage or less declined from 4.3% in 2013 to 3.9% in 2014 and remains well below the 13.4% in 1979.’”

Hmm…3 million workers at minimum wage with roughly half aged 16-24. Where would that group of individuals most likely be found?

Not surprisingly, they primarily are found in the fast-food industry.

“So what? People working at restaurants need to make more money.”

Okay, let’s hike the minimum wage to $15/hr. That doesn’t sound like that big of a deal, right?

My daughter turned 16 in April and got her first summer job. She has no experience, no idea what “working” actually means, and is about to be the brunt of the cruel joke of “taxation” when she sees her first paycheck.

Let’s assume she worked full-time this summer earning $15/hour.

  • $15/hr X 40 hours per week = $600/week
  • $600/week x 4.3 weeks in a month = $2,580/month
  • $2580/month x 12 months = $30,960/year.

Let that soak in for a minute.

We are talking paying $30,000 per year to a 16-year old to flip burgers.

Now, what do you think is going to happen to the price of hamburgers when companies must pay $30,000 per year for “hamburger flippers?”

Not A Magic Bullet

After Seattle began increased their minimum wage, the NBER published a study with this conclusion:

“Using a variety of methods to analyze employment in all sectors paying below a specified real hourly rate, we conclude that the second wage increase to $13 reduced hours worked in low-wage jobs by around 9 percent, while hourly wages in such jobs increased by around 3 percent.Consequently, total payroll fell for such jobs, implying that the minimum wage ordinance lowered low-wage employees’ earnings by an average of $125 per month in 2016.”

This should not be surprising as labor costs are the highest expense to any business. It’s not just the actual wages, but  also payroll taxes, benefits, paid vacation, healthcare, etc. Employees are not cheap, and that cost must be covered by the goods or service sold. Therefore, if the consumer refuses to pay more, the costs have to be offset elsewhere.

For example, after Walmart and Target announced higher minimum wages, layoffs occurred (sorry, your “door greeter” retirement plan is “kaput”) and cashiers were replaced with self-checkout counters. Restaurants added surcharges to help cover the costs of higher wages, a “tax” on consumers, and chains like McDonald’s, and Panera Bread, replaced cashiers with apps and ordering kiosks.

separate NBER study revealed some other issues:

“The workers who worked less in the months before the minimum-wage increase saw almost no improvement in overall pay — $4 a month on average over the same period, although the result was not statistically significant. While their hourly wage increased, their hours fell substantially. 

The potential new entrants who were not employed at the time of the first minimum-wage increasefared the worst. They noted that, at the time of the first increase, the growth rate in new workers in Seattle making less than $15 an hour flattened out and was lagging behind the growth rate in new workers making less than $15 outside Seattle’s county. This suggests that the minimum wage had priced some workers out of the labor market, according to the authors.”

Again, this should not be surprising. If a business can “try out” a new employee at a lower cost elsewhere, such is what they will do. If the employee becomes an “asset” to the business, they will be moved to higher-cost areas. If not, they are replaced.

Here is the point that is often overlooked.

Your Minimum Wage Is Zero

Individuals are worth what they “bring to the table” in terms of skills, work ethic, and value. Minimum wage jobs are starter positions to allow businesses to train, evaluate, and grow valuable employees.

  • If the employee performs as expected, wages increase as additional duties are increased.
  • If not, they either remain where they are, or they are replaced.

Minimum wage jobs were never meant to be a permanent position, nor were they meant to be a “living wage.”

Individuals who are capable, but do not aspire, to move beyond “entry-level” jobs have a different set of personal issues that providing higher levels of wages will not cure.

Lastly, despite these knock-off effects of businesses adjusting for higher costs, the real issue is that the economy will quickly absorb, and remove, the benefit of higher minimum wages. In other words, as the cost of production rises, the cost of living will rise commensurately, which will negate the intended benefit.

The reality is that while increasing the minimum wage may allow workers to bring home higher pay in the short term; ultimately they will be sent to the unemployment lines as companies either consolidate or eliminate positions, or replace them with machines.

There is also other inevitable unintended consequences of boosting the minimum wage.

The Trickle Up Effect:

According to Payscale, the median hourly wage for a fast-food manager is $11.00 an hour.

Therefore, what do you think happens when my daughter, who just got her first job with no experience, is making more than the manager of the restaurant? The owner will have to increase the manager’s salary. But wait. Now the manager is making more than the district manager which requires another pay hike. So forth, and so on.

Of course, none of this is a problem as long as you can pass on higher payroll, benefit and rising healthcare costs to the consumer. But with an economy stumbling along at 2%, this may be a problem.

A report from the Manhattan Institute concluded:

By eliminating jobs and/or reducing employment growth, economists have long understood that adoption of a higher minimum wage can harm the very poor who are intended to be helped.Nonetheless, a political drumbeat of proposals—including from the White House—now calls for an increase in the $7.25 minimum wage to levels as high as $15 per hour.

But this groundbreaking paper by Douglas Holtz-Eakin, president of the American Action Forum and former director of the Congressional Budget Office, and Ben Gitis, director of labormarket policy at the American Action Forum, comes to a strikingly different conclusion: not only would overall employment growth be lower as a result of a higher minimum wage, but much of the increase in income that would result for those fortunate enough to have jobs would go to relatively higher-income households—not to those households in poverty in whose name the campaign for a higher minimum wage is being waged.”

This is really just common sense logic but it is also what the CBO recently discovered as well.

The CBO Study Findings

Overall

  • “Raising the minimum wage has a variety of effects on both employment and family income. By increasing the cost of employing low-wage workers, a higher minimum wage generally leads employers to reduce the size of their workforce.
  • The effects on employment would also cause changes in prices and in the use of different types of labor and capital.
  • By boosting the income of low-wage workers who keep their jobs, a higher minimum wage raises their families’ real income, lifting some of those families out of poverty. However, real income falls for some families because other workers lose their jobs, business owners lose income, and prices increase for consumers. For those reasons, the net effect of a minimum-wage increase is to reduce average real family income.”

Employment

  • 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 consumers to purchase fewer goods and services.
  • The employers consequently produce fewer goods and services, so they reduce their employment of both low-wage workers and higher-wage workers.
  • Second, when the cost of employing low-wage workers goes up, the relative cost of employing higher-wage workers or investing in machines and technology goes down.
  • An increase in the minimum wage affects those two components in offsetting ways.
    • It increases the cost of employing new hires for firms
    • It also makes firms with raise wages for all current employees whose wages are below the new minimum, regardless of whether new workers are hired.

Effects Across Employers.

  • Employers vary in how they respond to a minimum-wage increase.
  • Employment tends to fall more, for example, at firms whose sales decline when they raise prices and at firms that can readily substitute machines or technology for low-wage workers.
  • They might  reduce workers’ fringe benefits (such as health insurance or pensions) and job perks (such as employee discounts), which would lessen the effect of the higher minimum wage on total compensation. That, in turn, would weaken employers’ incentives to reduce their employment of low-wage workers.
  • Employers could also partly offset their higher costs by cutting back on training or by assigning work to independent contractors who are not covered by the FLSA.

Macroeconomic Effects.

  • Reductions in employment would initially be concentrated at firms where higher prices quickly reduce sales. Over a longer period, however, more firms would replace low-wage workers with higher-wage workers, machines, and other substitutes.
  • A higher minimum wage shifts income from higher-wage consumers and business owners to low-wage workers. Because low-wage workers tend to spend a larger fraction of their earnings, some firms see increased demand for their goods and services, which boosts the employment of low-wage workers and higher-wage workers alike.
  • A decrease in the number of low-wage workers reduces the productivity of machines, buildings, and other capital goods. Although some businesses use more capital goods if labor is more expensive, that reduced productivity discourages other businesses from constructing new buildings and buying new machines. That reduction in capital reduces low-wage workers’ productivity, which leads to further reductions in their employment.

Don’t misunderstand me.

Hiking the minimum wage doesn’t affect my business at all as no one we employee makes minimum wage. This is true for MOST businesses.

The important point here is that the unintended consequences of a minimum wage hike in a weak economic environment are not inconsequential.

Furthermore, given that businesses are already fighting for profitability, hiking the minimum wage, given the subsequent “trickle up” effect, will lead to further increases in automation and the “off-shoring” of jobs to reduce rising employment costs. 

In other words, so much for bringing back those manufacturing jobs.

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22 Comments
Anonymous
Anonymous
September 9, 2019 1:02 pm

You know what i’ve noticed about higher minimum wages? My favorite burger at the same restaurant is now 10.95 and comes with chips, no pickle.
It used to be 5.95 with seasoned fries and their home made spicy dill. “Sharon doesnt work here anymore so theres no one to make the pickles”. Why? “We had to cut staff, thats why tracy is gone too”(fav waitress). Thats a small seasonal restaurant the does most of its business in the winter months. Oh, they cut a bartender as well, and the owners hubby had to go back to work as a carpenter.

anarchyst
anarchyst
September 9, 2019 1:08 pm

The author’s premise that higher wages results in economic stagnation can be proven false.

He parrots the old “business school model” that the stockholder is king and that employee wages must be kept at a bare minimum, “whatever the market will bear at the lowest common denominator” for capitalism to work.

I ask the author:

How do you explain the wage disparity between “Costco” (which pays its employees well) and “Sam’s Club” (which is at the bottom of the wage scale) despite the nature of the work being virtually identical?

Henry Ford CREATED a market which had not existed when he paid his employees $5.00 per day when the average wage of the day was around $1.25 per day.

His premise was not entirely altruistic as assembly line work was monotonous; a way had to be found to retain employees, as well.

Of course, the wall street types and the banksters howled that Ford’s wage rates would destroy capitalism (as they knew it-those at the top reap all of the benefits while the proles are forced to live on a bare subsistence wage, due to the machinations of those at the top).

Guess what??

The OPPOSITE happened. Henry Ford knew one of the basic tenets of a truly free, capitalistic society, that a well-paid work force would be able to participate and contribute to a strong economy, unlike what is taught in business schools today-that wages must be kept to a bare minimum and that the stockholder is king.

Our free trade politicians have assisted the greedy wall street types and banksters in depressing wages on the promise of cheap foreign labor and products.

A good example of this is the negative criticism that Costco receives for paying its employees well above market wages. These same wall street types praise Wal-Mart and Sam’s Club for paying its employees barely subsistence wages while assisting them in filling out their public assistance (welfare) forms.

Any sane person KNOWS that in order for capitalism to work, employees need to make an adequate wage.

Unfortunately, this premise does not exist in today’s business climate.

Henry Ford openly criticized those of the “tribe” for manipulating wall street and banksters for their own advantage, and was roundly (and unjustly) criticized for pointing out the TRUTH.

Catholic priest, Father Coughlin did the same thing and was punished by the Catholic church for speaking TRUTH, despite his popularity and exposing the TRUTH of the American economy and the outsider internationalists that ran it . . . and STILL run it.

Our race to the bottom will not be without consequences. A great realignment is necessary (and is coming) . .

Dutchman
Dutchman
  anarchyst
September 9, 2019 2:15 pm

Simple supply and demand. If you have no skills, the jobs you are going to get are low wage jobs. If you want more pay get a skill that’s in demand. Nobody should make a career working low wage jobs. Makes no sense paying someone $30,000 year for unskilled labor.

anarchyst
anarchyst
  Dutchman
September 9, 2019 2:23 pm

I agree with you that there are jobs not “worth” a mandated $15.00 per hour. It seems that those at the top amass more and more while the rest of us stagnate. Adjusted for inflation, there has not been a real “wage increase” since 1970.
In my previous post, I stated that Henry Ford had the right idea, creating and nurturing a market for his products. Today’s business school graduates could learn a lot from Henry Ford…

A
A
  anarchyst
September 9, 2019 2:34 pm

While I agree adjusted real hourly wages today aren’t any better than they were in the mid-1970’s but how much of that is attributable to the US transitioning from a manufacturing economy to a service economy. Back when Henry Ford paid his people $5/day do you think the corner merchant started paying their cashiers the same? Hardly. Ford did it because he had the profits to do it and didn’t have to raise the price of his product. Most min-wage workers are in food service and retail. Razor think margins for one and a collapsing industry for the other. Not an industry first realizing the productivity gains of the assembly line and minting profits on a booming industry.

Costco and Walmart among others have size and profits to pay better and do to an extent as cited. The problem is the independent business owner with a restaurant or small retail does not. Min wage disproportionately affects the small business guy and artificially raising wages will affect prices and employment just as mentioned in the article. So instead of helping that low wage employee it in turn hurts them.

I’ll be the first to say that executive compensation is absurd in many cases and many people across the board are underpaid. That being said the market needs to be free to set wages where they are appropriate. Having the gov’t step in will only pervert the market for the worse.

the experienced
the experienced
  A
September 9, 2019 3:14 pm

And then there are the regional differences. I travel a lot in my job and get to experience different areas. I live in a low wage region where an experienced mechanic providing his own tools may only get $15 per hour. I did it. But I made and make, what I call, a good living. Now others may easily disagree, when they see how I live. Everyone to his own. On the other hand, when I still had my resume posted on the web, I would get daily emails from recruiting firms offering six digit salaries. But I don’t want to live in any of those places where these jobs are offered.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  A
September 9, 2019 11:13 pm

Screw all that service economy bull shit ! The tax base from low wage service jobs does not maintain a police , Fire or education system with full retirement at 50 , not without a shitload of debt and Shell games and 3 card Monty in every government budget

starfcker
starfcker
  anarchyst
September 9, 2019 2:55 pm

I’ll take you one further, Anarchyst. Let’s make the minimum wage $25. an hour, but only for publicly traded or hedge fund owned companies. For everyone else, the minimum wage stays the same.

Stucky
Stucky
  anarchyst
September 9, 2019 5:02 pm

Henry Ford’s employees made ….. AUTOMOBILES.

McDonald’s employees make …. HAMBURGERS.

One is worth more than the minimum wage. One is not. Learn why this is so, and you shall acquire wisdom.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  anarchyst
September 9, 2019 11:08 pm

Fords premise is those building his car needs to be able to buy the product they produce , back in 55 “WE WERE MAKIN THUNDERBIRDS”

llpoh
llpoh
  anarchyst
September 9, 2019 11:23 pm

Once again, anarchyst misses the point, and entirely misrepresents what Ford did. . He lso ignores the fact that Ford denied the entire Jew thing, and apologized in writing that his publishing companies published such things.

Ford paid what he paid entirely for his own benefit – to retain employees, When he increased wages, he was hiring over fifty thousand new employees a year, while only needing 12,000.

The other base fallacy is that Ford set his wages voluntarily. They were not mandated. The market needs to be left alone. Forcing employees to pay more than the market commands will result in one thing – loss of jobs.

anarchyst
anarchyst
  llpoh
September 10, 2019 4:59 am

Ford was “encouraged” to “apologize” for his knowledge and dissemination of tracts describing jewish behavior because it was “good for business”. Can’t have those jews buying Chevys, you know. You are correct that wages should be set voluntarily without government coercion.

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
September 9, 2019 3:50 pm

Was in Denver last week and saw numerous signs offering $12.50/hr to work fast food. I would say supply and demand is working and all without a government mandate.

BB
BB
  TN Patriot
September 9, 2019 5:20 pm

I worked in high school for 2.85 an hour and was still able to ride in my nice muscle car.That was work in a cotton mill.
You may ask what’s my point? Don’t know.

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
  BB
September 9, 2019 5:47 pm

What was the minimum wage? Lived a couple of miles from a cotton seed mill and used to hate the smell. Also knew a guy who smothered when the seed pile collapsed on him.

I put myself through college working my ass off through the summer (carpenter, mowing right of way and erecting farm implements) and working for the university during the school year. Sr. year, I was making $2.22/hr doing landscape while minimum wage was $1.80.

B.S in V.C.
B.S in V.C.
September 9, 2019 6:12 pm

Burger King is not a career
Its for teenagers

Anonymous
Anonymous
  B.S in V.C.
September 9, 2019 11:15 pm

Not anymore !

TampaRed
TampaRed
September 9, 2019 7:53 pm

2 points about the minimum wage–
many union contracts are tied to the minimum wage,so it ain’t just the manager at a particular company that gets raised–

the min. wage was enacted by northern legislators who had the power to shove laws thru congress because businesses would go down south & recruit lower wage employees,esp black employees,to come north & work 4 less–

DONKEY
DONKEY
September 9, 2019 9:50 pm

I’m pretty sure lots of people on TBP have bitched about all the welfare full time Walmart employees use up. No? The minimum wage will rise. Book it. Economics be damned.

Anonymous
Anonymous
September 9, 2019 11:05 pm

The federal government has already set a minimum wage requirements and benefits . What ever the lowest scale for a full time government employee is that’s the minimum wage and benefits that all full time employees should receive . Anything less is indentured servitude if the employee is expected to pay any tax on anything .

llpoh
llpoh
September 9, 2019 11:27 pm

This can all be condensed down to this basic and inevitable truth:

If you charge more for something, there will be less of it consumed.

If you charge more for labor, there will be less of it consumed. The flow on is if you charge more for a hamburger, there will be fewer consumed.

The corollary is of course if you force the price of something up artificially by law, the impact will be even greater than if it happened naturally.

DONKEY
DONKEY
  llpoh
September 10, 2019 9:46 am

How come we don’t get less government then?