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Dangerous Consequences of Hiking the Minimum Wage

Published 05/06/2023, 08:30 AM
Updated 02/15/2024, 03:10 AM

How does the minimum wage affect the Fed’s biggest fear? I touched on this subject previously as the Fed began its rate-hiking campaign. However, while the issue of the “millions of people” who aren’t paid a “living wage” for work makes headlines, the actual numbers are pretty underwhelming.

As of the end of 2021, there are 2 million workers at, or below, minimum wage. Crucially, this number includes those in the restaurant profession that are paid “wages” of $2/hour but also receive tips. Notably, the number and total percentage of ALL workers today at or below minimum wage are at the lowest levels since 1979.

Employees At/Or Below Minimum Wage

Where Are They?

Unsurprisingly, you will find the majority of minimum wage earners in fast-food, transportation, and personal care occupations.

Minimum Wage Workers

As the Bureau of Labor Statistics notes:

Minimum-wage workers tend to be young. Although workers under age 25 represented nearly one-fifth of hourly paid workers, they made up 44 percent of those paid the federal minimum wage or less.

The Federal Minimum wage is a political “hot potato” that garners attention but has little impact on the economy’s overall health.

“So what? People working at restaurants need to make a ‘living wage.'”

While it is an emotionally charged argument, the minimum wage is not meant to be a living standard.

Minimum wage jobs are starter positions to allow businesses to train, evaluate, and grow valuable employees.

  • If the employee performs, wages increase along with additional duties.
  • If not, they either remain where they are or get replaced.
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Critically, minimum wage jobs were not meant to be permanent or “living wage.”

If an individual remains stuck at the minimum wage, it may have more to do with the worker than the employer. According to a recent survey of 1344 managers by ResumeBuilder.com, GenZ, the group most likely found working at minimum wage, is “the” most challenging generation to work with.

  • 49% say it’s difficult to work with GenZ all or most of the time
  • The top reasons they feel GenZ is difficult to work with are the lack of technological skills, effort, and motivation.
  • 65% say they more commonly need to fire GenZers than employees of other generations
  • 12% have fired a GenZer less than one week after their start date
  • Being too easily offended is a top reason GenZers get fired.

Nonetheless, there is a misplaced outcry for hiking the minimum wage to $15 an hour, or in California’s case, $22. The problem, of course, is the economic impact on those receiving those pay increases.

As is always the case, there is “no free lunch.”

No Free Lunch

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

However, assume the employee works full-time, 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.

Given that most are in the fast-food industry, what happens to the price of hamburgers when companies must pay $30,000 annually for “hamburger flippers?”

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McDonald’s and Walmart can give you a clue.

“KeKe Mendez recorded herself driving to a McDonald’s drive-thru. When she approached the window, there wasn’t an employee in sight. Instead, she was met with an automated machine handling her order. The machine placed the bag down and pushed it on a conveyor belt to the window.

After Walmart and Target) announced higher minimum wages, layoffs occurred, and cashiers got 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.

Such 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; that cost must be covered by the goods or services sold. Therefore, if the consumer refuses to pay more, the costs must become offset elsewhere.

More importantly, just as we found out with sending stimulus payments to households, the service cost will increase once businesses realize more money is available. As noted by the Heritage Foundation, the impact of a $15 Federal minimum wage would increase childcare costs by $2000 to $6000 depending on the state.

Impact of $15 Federal Minimum Wage on Childcare Costs

Source: Heritage Foundation

In other words, there is “no free lunch,” as increasing the minimum wage will lead to an increase (inflation) in everything else, essentially wiping out the benefit of the wage increase.

However, there is more to hiking the minimum wage than just increased costs. It has the potential to exacerbate the Fed’s biggest fear.

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The Wage Spiral

How can hiking the minimum wage foster a wage spiral?

Let’s look at an example parcel carrier job that currently pays $15/hour and has the following work requirements.

  • Lifting boxes up to 150 lbs.
  • Loading and unloading trucks in a warehouse that can be freezing or sweltering,
  • Driving a large truck anywhere from 10-150 miles a day,
  • Customer interaction,
  • Route planning.

What would be the consequences of raising the minimum wage to $15/hour for this worker?

There are two possible outcomes.

  1. Instead of lifting parcels of up to 150 lbs per day, they quit for a much easier job for the same pay; or
  2. Demands a pay raise (which, if they don’t get the raise, they quit to take a much easier job.)

The parcel carrier service acquiesces and raises them to $20/hour. However, now the managers making $20/hour want a raise, and so forth. It is the same effect as throwing a rock into a pond. Yes, the rock (in this case, the number of minimum-wage workers) may be small, but the “ripple effect” to the pond’s edges becomes substantial.

As wages increase at the bottom, there is a trickle-up effect on all workers. Importantly, those accelerating wage costs ultimately must pass on to consumers, otherwise known as inflation. That cycle of rising wages and prices is the “wage-price spiral.” The Fed already got a taste of the problem with the influx of stimulus into the economy, which led to surging demand when employees were scarce.

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Annual Rate of Change

Such is also why the Federal Reserve remains committed to hiking interest rates to slow economic demand (which, in turn, will lower wages as unemployment increases) to reduce inflationary pressures.

CPI Inflation Rate-Annual Change

The Consequences

The consequences of mandated minimum wage increases are problematic due to the impact such can have on overall wages, costs, and corporate responses. The Manhattan Institute previously 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.”

Such is just common sense logic, but it also finds support from the CBO report.

  • 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 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.
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The critical point here is that the unintended consequences of a minimum wage hike in a weak economic environment are not inconsequential. Given that businesses will fight to maintain profitability, hiking the minimum wage, given the subsequent “trickle-up” effect, will lead to further automation and the “off-shoring” of jobs to reduce rising employment costs.

The Federal Reserve is keenly aware of the wage-price spiral and understands that increasing borrowing costs will eventually force wages to come down as the economy and inflation decline.

Unfortunately, those that just got the minimum wage increase may see their jobs soon replaced by a more cost-effective method.

Latest comments

This article was very well written. It took me some time to digest the information. Thanks for sharing !
EXCELLENT article!! This just proves that the socialist Democrats (Sanders, Warren, AOC, etc) are nothing but demagogues. I personally think there shouldn't be ANY minimum wage - wages should be the direct agreement between employer and employee. People always get paid what they are worth.
Great write up. I see you have a few Keynesian followers here, Krugman is a joke.
paul krugman dispelled this myth many years ago. sorry Lance, but I tend to side with krugman, who has won a Nobel prize in economics for his contributions than your articles. I highly recommend reading his paper on minimum wage hikes
also corporate profit margins are at record Highs. it's a complete popeycock argument to suggest corporations can't afford to pay their workers at the bottom of the totem pole an increased wage. but again most of your arguments are discussed by krugman. please read then update your article
It's called inflation. That's what will happen when you raise wages. Unfortunately, in some areas, even 20/hour can't make a living. It's only enough for surviving.
Another Neanderthal writing from the heart. Knowing what its like to make below poverty wages. Then wonder why we have soMany social programs
Though minimum wage DEFINITELY needs to be increased dramatically, of more importance is childcare and universal health.
It should say the dangerous consequences of not raising the minimum wage more often. Minimum wage shpuld be $13-14 an hour easy just because inflation has chnaged that much. With the increase in minimum wagw its gots going to force wages up across the board. Making the Fed’s fight against inflation frivolous. Anyone that has a half heart should know that you can support much on the ridiculous low wage. It would be different if it was a starting point for high school kids that want to make some money. But to pay an adult that needs to pay bills this wage is the very reason we are $32 trillion in debt and looking at a possible debt default. By company owners not having it in their budget to pay better than this they are either greedy or horrible at operating a business. The people that make anything under $15 an hour are given millions in food, housing and payment assistance. That’s absolutely wrong.
wow thats a complex issue. first of almost any argument presented here, can be rolled both ways. Of course actors and mechanisms will adapt to new rules, but as you argue many factors are interwoven, but it should be accounted for mechanisms in both ways. not to mention the bigger issue is automation altogether. its presented here as a counterargument, but nobody knows how many jobs we will be left with in 10 years altogether, independent of a raise of minimum wages. Are estimates of 50-80% across almost all branches realistic? I think nobody has a frigging clue tbh
Mr. Roberts showing his complete ignorance of easily checked facts in both history and economics is why nobody wants to pay for this site. The author should be embarrassed.
The garbage spewed above is author's misplaced argument to suppress the working class longer. We need "$30 hamburger flippers"! Then maybe when sales tank because burgers are $10, they will reinvent their business models. And finally we will all "Get A Break Today" from the endless litany of useless ADS spewed across the 'InterScreens' that have created an army of adblocker companies, and finally realize that Hey, we could stop pissing away $Billions on ads that get blocked, and pay our employees a LIVING WAGE! Wonder if anyone ever gave a thought as to why the employees are not motivated? Probably DEPRESSION because they can't survive with the wages paid by todays Silas Marner Corporations.
Ouh this is so American point of view. Man in the ivory tower tells how things should go :)
omg, someone is going to get a living wage? better stop that now. everyone knows the highest profit can be made by slave labor.
forgot to suggest the executives could get paid less and easily pay the same amount of workers a decent wage.
already, the US is little more than shell companies in many arenas. how much labor is left to lose?
The reason only 2% of Americans make minimum wage is because minimum wage is so low.  In 1979, the minimum wage was $2.90 which is $12.80 in 2023 dollars.  If we had a $12.80 minimum wage today, there'd be far more people than 2% who'd make at or below minimum wage.
exactly, minimum wage has been decreasing or flat in real dollars for decades.
Thats the most sane thing i have read yet. There is no way someone should be paid less than $10 for sure. So executive just keep getting crazy bonuses and for investors the share buybacks help but why isnt this spread between workers? How can someone make 1000 times or more than the people that do the work? Granted being an exec isnt easy but is it really worth 1000X higher pay???? We just need to rip off the bandaid and bring minimum wage where it should be. The trickle up effect will begin and these over paid execs can make 500 times more than their employees verse 1000X
Definitely need to bring the minimum wage up and let trickle up effect take place. Then let over paid execs make 3-500 times what their employees make instead of the ridiculous 1000x+
AI will shortly be writing better pundit articles than the current pundits - the tone of the articles will depend on whether they are created for the FOX, NBC, CNN sites, AI will come for mid level jobs much faster than minimum wage because all accounting can be done instantly by AI good bye middle managers and bean counters - no ones job will eventually be safe from advanced tech - once the AI programs gets to a certain point - the US will be africa - the rich won't need you anymore! Just think what Putin would be like if he had 10 million robots to do his oppressing
Poverty of 39 Million is within the same range as the 70's. From 11% to 14%.  In this time the explosion of the very rich to super rich has captured a majority of the whole wealth.  The gap between rich and middle class has grown substantially sine the 70's and continued to grow, The starker reality is the huge gap between rich and poor.  We see what we want and disregard the rest.  Just the 2 trillion giveaways to the poor super wealthy amplifies this 10 fold yet i didn't hear anyone complain then?  the HAVES love to justify taking away from everyone else.  Absurd report and misleading.  BTW the RED STATES are DOUBLE or TRIPLE in poverty as they support the GOP which in turn make sure that stays the same. I encourage YOU to justify that.
But doubling the money supply isn’t if you don’t like people earning enough to survive punch yourself in the face
you missed most of the entire retail sector - i know us malls were shut for a couple years from covid but the retail sector has a huge minimum wage number - and Lance maybe you should try living on minimum wage for a month and then write about that experience - oh and find somewhere to live that a minimum wage person lives while you do it for the full experience - its easy to play poverty when you don't have to live it
You didn't fully read what Lance said about the consequences of raising the minimum wage being replacement by machines or simply less employees. Therefore the real minimum wage is actually zero (unemployment).
 machines are coming, McD's has been working on automation of process's for 30+ years, as soon as AI can effectively run high quality robotics - human labor will go into massive decline - minimum wage has zero to do with it - robots don't sue, need pensions, have unions and as long as their not built with to much planned obsolescence they will be long term cost efficient. anyone who doesn't see this coming hasn't read much sci fi and isn't really paying attention. The, in between, is the raw materials needed to manufacture the initial robotic systems and the infrastructure to power it all - 5-10 more years for the AI and who knows how long for the robotics - likely less then it will all be about power systems and batteries
The analysis of these organizations diminish the societal and economic value of childcare and overlook that the occupations that require lifting 150lbs are a draw to workers who have this capacity. These analysts are also overlooking that automation is reaching all sectors of employment regardless of aptitude and ability and the arguments for and against increasing minimum wage. The misnomer of costs related to on the job training is exposed in other studies of intentional practices that induce turnover to avoid wage and salary increases for acquired skill and job development.
GenZ workers are not motivated? What? $7.50/hr doesn't get them excited? Also, making these arguments at a time of record profits for many of the companies likely to employ minimum wage workers just seems out of touch. As is this, which I'm sure no employer requires, except maybe the WWE: "Lifting boxes up to 150 lbs."
Mail carriers and similar delivery drivers are not required to be able to lift 150 lbs. The author got this wrong.
I'm sorry, Brad. That was my comment when I left out the "up to" part.
They are not required to lift up to 150 lbs. either.
How do anyone know whether consumer is willing to pay extra for that minimum wage? The actual amount added to the consumer isn't that minimum wage but added wages for other non minimum wage earners all the way up to added profits. Perhaps the buck should just stop at the minimum wage.
Yeah, funny who they pick to blame for costs and inflation.
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