Let’s be clear, enacting a higher-than-market minimum wage does not result in a higher income for all workers, only for those who retain their jobs. This increase will be at the expense of those who will become or will remain unemployed. We know this and yet minimum wage laws remain popular with public officials, editorial boards and voters who want to express their compassion for the working poor.
A more cynical reason is that advocating for an increase in the minimum wage is a way of making political points without having to account for an increase in government expenditures since the cost is presumably borne by employers. Unlike government, however, employers cannot print money and the increased costs will be passed on to consumers in the form of higher prices, or will be shouldered by those that will not be able to find a job because their skills do not command a wage level theatrically dictated by government fiat.
When government policy prices low-skilled workers and the inexperienced young out of the job market, skills atrophy, hope fades and tragically, unemployment becomes a way of life. Our current persistent unemployment levels among the disadvantaged may very well be the lagging effect of our unreflective support of minimum wage laws. Sixty years ago, the unemployment rate of 16- to 19-year-olds was less than eight percent. Today, after many rounds of minimum wage increases, youth unemployment is over 24 percent and close to 40 percent for black teenagers. Are minimum wage laws responsible for creating this new norm?
The idea that government can diminish poverty by making it more expensive for businesses to hire young and low-skill workers is illogical and worse, it is dishonest. If government can diminish poverty by enacting a $10.00 to $15.00 minimum wage, why stop there? Let’s raise the minimum wage to $90.00 an hour and eliminate poverty altogether. This is, of course, nonsense and so are minimum wage laws. We will not get good results from implementing a bad idea. Advocating for a higher minimum wage mandate is equivalent to advocating for higher unemployment.
**Previously published in the PanAm Post on June 28, 2016.
*José Azel is a Senior Scholar at the Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American Studies, University of Miami and the author of the book Mañana in Cuba. Follow José Azel on Twitter @JoseAzel
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