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The Minimum Wage: Increasing the Reward for Work

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National Economic Council

The Minimum Wage:
Increasing the Reward for Work

March 2000

A Report by the National Economic Council with the Assistance of the Council of Economic Advisers and the Office of the Chief Economist, U.S. Department of Labor


EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

  • Raising the Minimum Wage by $1 to $6.15 an Hour Would Potentially Benefit More than 10 Million American Workers—Most of Whom are Adult Workers. An analysis of labor market data shows that in 1999, 10.1 million hourly paid workers made between $5.15 and $6.14 an hour, and thus would potentially benefit from a $1 increase in the minimum wage. About 69 percent of these workers are adults (age 20 or over), about 60 percent are women, about 45 percent worked full-time, and about 33 percent were parents with children under 18 years old. In 1997, the earnings of average minimum wage workers accounted for 54 percent of their family's total earnings.
  • Raising the Minimum Wage to $6.15 an Hour Would Restore the Real Value to What It Was in 1982. Since it was first established in 1938, the minimum wage has been increased 19 times. Between January 1981 and March 1990, the minimum wage was fixed at $3.35 an hour, while prices rose by nearly 50 percent. The proposal to raise the minimum wage by $1 over two years would restore the real value of the minimum wage to what it was in 1982.
  • Increasing the Minimum Wage Would Help Hard-Pressed Families Pay for Groceries, Rent, and Other Necessities. Raising the minimum wage from $5.15 to $6.15 would raise the annual earnings of a full-time worker by about $2,000 a year. A study of spending by low-income families found that they spend on average about $300 per month on groceries and about $400 per month on rent. Thus, for a full-time worker, the minimum wage increase would translate into enough money to pay for nearly 7 months of groceries or 5 months of rent.
  • Recent Increases in the Minimum Wage Had No Discernable Negative Effect on Employment. Since the minimum wage increase in 1996, the economy has created more than 10 million jobs and the unemployment rate has fallen from 5.2 percent in September 1996 to 4.1 percent in February 2000, near its lowest level in thirty years. Labor market trends for workers most affected by the minimum wage increase—including younger workers, workers with lower educational levels, and minorities—also show no negative impact of the minimum wage on employment. Numerous careful economic studies, including ones by David Card and Alan Krueger, have shown that increasing the minimum wage has no negative effect on employment. Recent research has even suggested that higher wages can increase employment, because they increase employers' ability to attract, retain, and motivate workers. And they benefit workers by increasing the reward to work.
  • The Minimum Wage Plays a Key Role in Ensuring That All Workers Share in a Growing Economy. In the last seven years, incomes have grown nearly as strongly at the bottom as at the top of the income distribution, ending a decades long increase in inequality. In contrast, in the previous two decades inequality widened, as poorer families saw their incomes decline in real terms. Research has shown that the decline in the real value of the minimum wage from 1979 to 1988 was responsible for approximately 24 percent of the increase in wage inequality experienced by men and about 32 percent of the increase in wage inequality for women.
  • The Minimum Wage Has Helped Reduce the Welfare Caseload. By increasing the reward to work, a higher minimum wage attracts new workers into the workforce. An analysis by the Council of Economic Advisers showed that higher federal and state minimum wages were responsible for 10 to 16 percent of the decline in welfare caseloads between 1996 and 1998.
  • The Minimum Wage and the Earned Income Tax Credit Are Complementary. A working parent with two children earning the minimum wage in 1993 made $10,563 with the EITC (in 1998 inflation-adjusted dollars)—well below the poverty line. With the 1993 increase in the EITC and the 90 cent increase in the minimum wage in 1996 and 1997, a comparably situated family in 1998 was above the poverty line—making $13,268—a 26 percent inflation-adjusted increase in its standard of living.

 

1. Introduction

The American economy is in the midst of the longest economic expansion in history. Since January 1993, the economy has created nearly 21 million new jobs. The unemployment rate in February 2000 was 4.1 percent, near its lowest level in three decades. The overall performance of the economy has only grown stronger over time. In the last four years, labor productivity has grown at a 2.9 percent annual rate and GDP has grown at a 4.4 percent annual rate. At the same time, the underlying core inflation rate in 1999 was 1.9 percent—the lowest rate since 1965.



In contrast to the previous twenty years, the strong economy of the last seven years has contributed to shared growth across all income groups and substantial poverty reduction. As indicated in Chart 1, incomes have grown nearly as strongly at the bottom as at the top of the income distribution, ending a decades long increase in inequality. The poverty rate has fallen to 12.7 percent, the lowest level since 1979. The strong labor market has been beneficial to people across the economic and demographic spectrum. In 1999, the unemployment rates for African Americans and Hispanics fell to the lowest levels ever recorded.

Strong growth is necessary but not sufficient to produce sustained income gains and poverty reduction. Also important are policies that insure that all workers are rewarded for their work. The Clinton Administration has consistently sought to make work pay through a range of policies, including expanding the Earned Income Tax Credit in 1993, reforming welfare in order to increase work incentives, and increasing investments in child care for working parents. And an additional key element was the 1996-97 increase in the minimum wage. These policies interact in a beneficial way for low-income families. For instance, a working parent with two children earning the minimum wage in 1993 made $10,563 with the EITC (in 1998 inflation-adjusted dollars), well below the poverty threshold. With the 1993 increase in the EITC and the 90 cent increase in the minimum wage in 1996 and 1997, a comparably situated family in 1998 was above the poverty level—making $13,268—a 26 percent inflation-adjusted increase in their standard of living.

This report examines the role that the minimum wage plays in increasing the reward to work and boosting incomes for workers at the bottom of the earnings distribution. The report also examines the recent evidence about the effect of the minimum wage on employment.

 

2. Background on the Minimum Wage

A federal minimum wage of 25 cents was first established as a part of the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 (FLSA). Since its inception, the federal minimum wage has been increased 19 times, and the FLSA has been amended numerous times to expand the workers covered by the minimum wage provision. In recent years, about two thirds of wage and salary workers have been covered by the FLSA minimum wage. (Workers who are exempt most often are in executive, administrative, and professional occupations.)

The federal minimum wage reached its highest value in real terms in 1968, at $7.67 in 1999 dollars (see Chart 2). With five increases during the 1970s, the minimum wage held its value at approximately $6.60. The last increase of the 1970s left the inflation-adjusted value at $6.66. From January 1981 through March 1990, the minimum wage was unchanged, while at the same time prices rose by nearly 50 percent. This eroded the real value of the minimum wage at the end of the 1980s to $4.50. The dollar level of the minimum wage was increased from $3.35 to $3.80 in 1990 and to $4.25 in 1991. In real terms the value of the minimum wage was still well below the 1968 peak.



Even with the modest inflation of the 1990s, the minimum wage lost value, falling to $4.65 in 1995. By 1996, the minimum wage adjusted for inflation was approaching a 40-year low. Inflation had largely wiped out the last increase in the minimum wage in 1990. In August 1996, Congress passed and President Clinton signed into law a two-step increase, lifting the minimum wage from $4.25 to $5.15. The first step of that increase went into effect October 1, 1996 and the second step on September 1, 1997. More recently, President Clinton proposed to increase the minimum wage by $1 over two years, raising it to $6.15. If the full increase were implemented in 2001, this would restore the real value of the minimum wage to its 1982 level, about 75 percent of the 1968 peak value.

3. The 1996-97 Minimum Wage Increase

The $0.90 increase in the minimum wage in 1996 and 1997 is estimated to have benefited almost 10 million American workers. This section examines the impact of this increase on employment and the distribution of wages.

Effect on Employment

Since the 1996-97 increase in the minimum wage, the American economy—and labor markets in particular—have continued to perform very strongly. Between September 1996 and February 2000, 10.2 million jobs were created—an average of 248,000 per month, even stronger job growth than in the previous 2 years. In retail trade, which has a large concentration of minimum wage workers, there were 1.4 million new jobs. Over this same period the overall unemployment rate fell from 5.2 percent to 4.1 percent.

In addition, welfare rolls have declined 44 percent since welfare reform was enacted in August 1996. A report by the Council of Economic Advisers (1999) suggests that 10 to 16 percent of the welfare caseload decline from 1996 to 1998 was attributable to the increases in federal and state minimum wages. Other important factors were changes in welfare policy and the decline in unemployment.



The strong labor market of the last four years, however, is not definitive proof that the minimum wage has no adverse effects on employment. Numerous other factors affect the job market, and workers paid at or near the minimum wage are a relatively small fraction of the overall workforce. A better test of the impact of minimum wage increases is the experience of workers most likely to be affected by the increases. An examination of data for these workers also shows no discernable negative effect of the last minimum wage increase. For example, adults (age 25 and above) with lower levels of education generally have relatively low wages. As Chart 3 indicates, though, quarterly unemployment rates have generally declined for both high school graduates with no college and those with less than a high school education. Chart 4 shows, similarly, that over the past five years the employment to population ratio generally held steady or increased for both groups of adults. No visible disruptions to these trends are apparent following either the 1996 or 1997 minimum wage increases. Comparable observations pertain for teenage workers in general, and for African American teens specifically (Charts 5 and 6).

These data provide evidence that the minimum wage increase did not have a major negative effect on employment. Still, as suggestive as this evidence is, it does not provide rigorous statistical tests that control for the myriad of factors that affect employment. Section 5 reviews the evidence from recent economic studies.

Effect on Wages for Low-income Workers

Recent increases in the minimum wage in the U.S. have improved the distribution of wages at the low end of the distribution. Fortin and Lemieux (1997) demonstrate the importance of the minimum wage in boosting wages at the low end, and reducing wage inequality. They show that the decline in the real value of the minimum wage from 1979 to 1988 was responsible for approximately 24 percent of the increase in wage inequality experienced by men and about 32 percent of the increase in wage inequality for women. Card and Krueger (1995) conclude that the 1990-91 minimum wage increase reversed about 30 percent of the increase in wage inequality that occurred during the previous decade.

The effect of the recent minimum wage increase—in October 1996 and September 1997—on the wage distribution is clearly evident in wage data. Statistics tabulated from the Current Population Survey (CPS), show that in the first two quarters of 1996, when the federal minimum wage was $4.25, about 10 percent of all hourly wage workers earned less than $5.00. The minimum wage increase (to $5.15) clearly increased wages in the low end of the distribution; by the first two quarters of 1998, the fraction of workers earning less than $5.00 declined to 2 percent.



Chart 7 illustrates the effect of the 1996-97 minimum wage increases on the low end of the wage distribution ($3.00 to $7.99) for just one demographic group of interest, women who maintain families and have at least one child present in the household. For 1996, the distribution of wages shows that a relatively small share of workers with hourly wages earn between $3.00 and $3.99. In contrast, a substantial fraction earned between $4.00 and $4.49. (The chart shows the distribution by 50-cent increments.) This jump, of course, reflects the clustering of workers whose wages were at or near the minimum wage. The comparable distribution for 1998 indicates a shift that was clearly due to the change in minimum wage policy. In the first two quarters of 1996, about 9 percent of these women earned less than $5.00. By the first two quarters of 1998, this fraction declined to 2 percent.

At the same time, an increasing share of workers earned wages above $6 and $7, suggesting that the increase in the minimum wage had spillover benefits for workers above the minimum wage. Such spillover effects have been documented more formally in research by Grossman (1983), Katz and Krueger (1992), and Card and Krueger (1994).

4. Raising the Minimum Wage to $6.15: Who Is Directly Affected?

Raising the minimum wage from $5.15 to $6.15 would raise the annual earnings of a full-time worker by about $2,000 a year. A study of spending by low-income families found that they spend on average about $300 per month on groceries and about $400 per month on rent. Thus, for a full-time worker, the minimum wage increase would translate into enough money to pay for nearly 7 months of groceries or 5 months of rent. This section provides a detailed examination of the workers that would benefit from a further increase in the minimum wage.

Characteristics of Minimum Wage Workers in 1999

Evidence about workers who currently earn the minimum wage is available from unpublished tabulations provided by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) based on data from the CPS. In 1999, 72.3 million workers were paid at hourly rates, representing about 61 percent of wage and salary workers. It is estimated that 3.3 million workers—4.6 percent of all workers who are paid an hourly rate—earn a wage at or below the current $5.15 Federal minimum. Of these 3.3 million workers, about 1.1 million reported a wage at exactly $5.15, while the remainder, 2.2 million, earned a wage less than $5.15. A study by Bernstein and Schmitt (1998) indicated that in 1997 the earnings of average minimum wage workers accounted for 54 percent of their family's total earnings.

Selected demographic and economic characteristics for these workers are presented in Table 1. The statistics indicate that about 70 percent of workers earning $5.15 or less were age 20 or older. 64 percent of these workers are women.

How Many Workers would be Affected by an Increase in the Minimum Wage?

Using the CPS data described above, it is possible to examine the number and characteristics of workers who would potentially receive a pay raise from a $1.00 increase in the federal minimum wage. Table 2 presents the number of individuals who currently have an hourly wage between $5.15 and $6.14. This table indicates that:

  • There are approximately 10.1 million workers within this wage range—about 14 percent of all workers paid an hourly rate.
  • 69 percent of the affected workers are adults age 20 or older.
  • About 60 percent of these workers are women.
  • 16 percent are African American and 20 percent are Hispanic.
  • 37 percent are the household head or a spouse who contributes to family income.

Other respected studies have looked at the question of who would potentially benefit from an increase in the minimum wage, focusing on family and income characteristics. Some highlights from these studies are:

  • Parents with children under 18 years old comprise almost 33 percent of those potentially affected. (Bernstein, Hartmann, and Schmitt, 1999).
  • Over 50 percent of the proposed gains would go to households with incomes less than $25,000 per year. (Bernstein, Hartmann, and Schmitt, 1999).
  • 45 percent of the gains go to families with incomes below 200 percent of the poverty level, and an additional 19 percent to families with income below 300 percent of the poverty level. (Burkhauser, 1999).

There are other workers who would also likely benefit from a $1.00 minimum wage increase in addition to those workers that report hourly wages between $5.15 and $6.14. As noted above, a number of the over 900,000 workers who report a $5.00 per hour wage are also likely to be workers currently at the minimum wage, but mis-reporting their earnings. There is also evidence, as discussed earlier, that workers who earn wages just above the new minimum can see their pay rise as a result of the minimum wage increase. To help gauge the size of this group in the event of a minimum wage increase to $6.15, Table 2 also presents the number of workers with hourly wages between $6.15 and $7.14. In 1999 there were approximately 8.4 million such workers, many of whom could indirectly benefit from a minimum wage increase.

Appendix A presents a breakdown of the number of workers that would benefit by state. While the most populous states would have the greatest number of workers in these wage categories (California, for example, has almost 1.5 million workers with wages between $5.15 and $6.14) the evidence suggests that thousands of workers in every state would potentially benefit from a $1.00 increase in the minimum wage.

 

Table 1. Employed Wage and Salary Workers Paid Hourly Rates with Earnings At or Below Minimum Wage, 1999

Characteristic

Number of workers (in thousands)

Percent distribution

Percent of workers in demographic group who earn $5.15 or less

Total paid hourly rates

Paid $5.15 or less

Total paid hourly rates

Paid $5.15 or less

Total, 16 years and over

72,306

3,340

100.0

100.0

4.6

           

AGE

         

16 to 19 years

6,600

1,006

9.1

30.1

15.2

20 and over

65,706

2,334

90.9

69.9

3.6

           

SEX

         

Men, 16 years and over

36,073

1,214

49.9

36.3

3.4

Women, 16 years and over

36,233

2,126

50.1

63.7

5.9

           

RACE AND HISPANIC ORIGIN

         

White

58,999

2,698

81.6

80.8

4.6

African American

10,126

515

14.0

15.4

5.1

Hispanic

9,402

513

13.0

15.4

5.5

           

FULL- AND PART-TIME STATUS

         

Full-time workers

54,931

1,320

76.0

39.5

2.4

Part-time workers

17,227

2,010

23.8

60.2

11.7

           

FAMILY RELATIONSHIP

         

Husbands

17,609

242

24.4

7.2

1.4

Wives

16,996

622

23.5

18.6

3.7

Women who maintain families

5,395

288

7.5

8.6

5.3

Men who maintain families

1,815

50

2.5

1.5

2.8

Other persons

30,491

2,082

42

62

28

Note: Data exclude the incorporated self-employed. Detail for the above race and Hispanic-origin groups will not sum to totals because data for the "other races" group are not presented and Hispanics are included in both the white and black population groups. Also note that the distinction between full- and part-time workers is based on hours usually worked. These data will not sum to totals because full- or part-time status on the principal job is not identifiable for a small number of multiple jobholders.

Source: U.S. Department of Labor (Bureau of Labor Statistics), unpublished tabulations from the Current Population Survey, 1999 annual averages.

 

Table 2. Distribution of Wage and Salary Workers Paid Hourly Rates, 1999

Characteristic

Number of workers (in thousands)

Percent distribution

Percent of workers in demographic group who fall in wage category

$5.15 - $6.14

$6.15 - $7.14

$5.15 - $6.14

$6.15 - $7.14

$5.15 - $6.14

$6.15 - $7.14

Total, 16 years and over

10,093

8,370

100.0

100.0

14.0

11.6

             

AGE

           

16 to 19 years

3,133

1,482

31.0

17.7

47.5

22.5

20 and over

6,960

6,888

69.0

82.3

10.6

10.5

             

SEX

           

Men, 16 years and over

4,076

3,405

40.4

40.7

11.3

9.4

Women, 16 years and over

6,018

4,965

59.6

59.3

16.6

13.7

             

RACE AND HISPANIC ORIGIN

           

White

8,027

6,668

79.5

79.7

13.6

11.3

African American

1,602

1,336

15.9

16.0

15.8

13.2

Hispanic

1,989

1,447

19.7

17.3

21.2

15.4

             

FULL- AND PART-TIME STATUS

           

Full-time workers

4,563

5,301

45.2

63.3

8.3

9.7

Part-time workers

5,512

3,048

54.6

36.4

32.0

17.7

             

FAMILY RELATIONSHIP

           

Husbands

851

990

8.4

11.8

4.8

5.6

Wives

1,821

1,962

18.0

23.4

10.7

11.5

Women who maintain families

855

807

8.5

9.6

15.8

15.0

Men who maintain families

171

167

1.7

2.0

9.4

9.2

Other persons

6,396

4,445

63

53

84

58

Note: Data exclude the incorporated self-employed. Detail for the above race and Hispanic-origin groups will not sum to totals because data for the "other races" group are not presented and Hispanics are included in both the white and black population groups. Also note that the distinction between full- and part-time workers is based on hours usually worked. These data will not sum to totals because full- or part-time status on the principal job is not identifiable for a small number of multiple jobholders.

Source: U.S. Department of Labor (Bureau of Labor Statistics), unpublished tabulations from the Current Population Survey, 1999 annual averages.

5. Economic Research on the Effect of the Minimum Wage On Employment

The impact of a moderate increase in the minimum wage on employment is a key question for policymakers. Clearly, while an increase in the minimum wage benefits those workers who receive it, some have raised concerns that these direct gains may be partially or fully offset if the minimum wage increase leads to greater unemployment among lower income workers. Section 3 discussed some of the aggregate evidence from the 1996-97 experience. This section discusses the economic theory and empirical evidence behind the effects of the minimum wage on employment.

Recent Economic Theory on the Impact of the Minimum Wage on Employment

The traditional economic theory of supply and demand predicts that an increase in the minimum wage above the market rate would increase the cost faced by employers, causing them to reduce employment. Recent theoretical analyses, however, have challenged this conventional wisdom, examining reasons why some employers may respond to a moderately higher minimum wage by expanding employment. Specifically, higher wages can help firms attract better workers, motivate them to work harder, and retain them for longer periods. (While firms always have the option of increasing their pay rate, some managers leave wages unchanged because of reluctance to increase average labor costs.) At least five papers—recently published in peer-reviewed economics journals—rigorously study this logic. These papers show that a moderate minimum wage can have a positive effect on employment. In general, then, an increase in the minimum wage has an ambiguous effect on employment. The only way to determine the effect in practice is to look at the empirical evidence.

Recent Empirical Evidence on Employment Effects

In an important book, economists David Card and Alan Krueger (1995) provide a critical analysis of previous research, and present their own extensive exploration of the wide variation in minimum wages across states found in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Their work shows that there were no negative employment effects even for teenagers, the group for whom any disemployment effects should be most apparent. Similarly, their detailed analysis fails to find disemployment effects of a minimum wage in the retail trade or in employment of fast food restaurants. More recent studies confirm these results.

Employment in Fast Food Restaurants. To determine the impact of minimum wages on employment, one would like to gather data from firms prior to a minimum wage increase and see how firms adjust employment relative to other similar firms for which the minimum wage does not increase. New work by Card and Krueger (forthcoming) comes closest to doing this. In 1992, New Jersey imposed a higher minimum wage, and yet the neighboring state of Pennsylvania did not. And then in 1996 an increase in the federal minimum wage affected Pennsylvania but not New Jersey. These two episodes provide an experiment that can be used to infer the effects of a minimum wage increase on employment. Card and Krueger use the BLS's employer-reported payroll files from 1991 through 1997 to evaluate employment growth of fast food restaurants in New Jersey and nearby counties in Pennsylvania. They conclude that the minimum wage changes had very little (and possibly slightly positive) effect on employment.

The British Experience. Dickens, Machin, and Manning (1999) studied the British experience with minimum wages. They found "…strong evidence that [minimum wages] compressed the distribution of earnings and no evidence that they have reduced employment."

CONCLUSION

The evidence is convincing that moderate increases in the minimum wage have provided meaningful additional earnings for many of America's most hard-pressed working families with no discernible negative employment effects. Increasing the minimum wage is one of the ways that government can help ensure that everyone continues to share in the benefits of growth. When the minimum wage was fixed from 1981 to 1990, the wages and incomes of poorer workers fell in real terms. Thanks to the 1996-97 minimum wage increase, today the minimum wage is helping to ensure that a single parent with two children does not have to raise his or her children in poverty.

The minimum wage is just one component of an overall strategy for insuring that all families benefit from the nation's economic growth. The President's proposed expansion in the Earned Income Tax Credit—to increase benefits for families with three or more children, reduce the marriage penalty, and reduce the phaseout rate—would enhance the value of a higher minimum wage, especially for families with more children and thus greater needs. At the same time, the President is committed to continuing to make important investments in people. Since 1993, the budget for education and training programs has nearly doubled and the President is proposing record increases for a number of key education programs, including Head Start, in his FY 2001 budget. Together, these policies are an investment in continued strong and shared economic growth.

REFERENCES

Bernstein, Jared, Heidi Hartmann, and John Schmitt. 1999. "The Minimum Wage Increase: A Working Woman's Issue." Economic Policy Institute Issue Brief 133, Washington, D.C.

Bernstein, Jared and John Schmitt. 1998. Making Work Pay: The Impact of the 1996-97 Minimum Wage Increase. Economic Policy Institute, Washington, D.C.

Bhaskar, V. and Ted To. 1999. "Minimum Wages for Ronald McDonald Monopsonies: A Theory of Monopsonistic Competition." The Economic Journal 109 (April): 190-203.

Burkhauser, Richard V. and Sarah G. Blanding. 1999. "A Review of Recent Evidence on the Effect of the Minimum Wage on the Working Poor," (paper presented at the Low Pay Commission's International Minimum Wage Symposium, London, England).

Card, David and Alan Krueger. 1994. "Minimum Wages and Employment: A Case Study of the Fast Food Industry in New Jersey and Pennsylvania." American Economic Review, 84: 772-793.

_______. 1995. Myth and Measurement. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

_______. 1999. "A Reanalysis of the Effect of the New Jersey Minimum Wage Increase on the Fast-Food Industry with Representative Payroll Data." Forthcoming, American Economic Review.

Council of Economic Advisers. 1999. "The Effects of Welfare Policy and the Economic Expansion on Welfare Caseloads: An Update." Executive Office of the President of the United States.

Dickens, Richard, Stephen Machin, Alan Manning. 1999. "The Effects of Minimum Wages on Employment: Theory and Evidence from Britain." Journal of Labor Economics 17(1): 1-22.

Fortin, Nicole and Thomas Lemieux. 1997. "Institutional Changes and Rising Wage Inequality: Is There a Linkage?" Journal of Economic Perspectives 11(2): 75-96.

Grossman, J.B. 1983. "The Impact of the Minimum Wage on Other Wages." Journal of Human Resources 18: 359-378.

Haugen, Steven E. and Earl F. Mellor. "Estimating the Number of Minimum Wage Workers." Monthly Labor Review January 1990.

Katz, Lawrence and Alan Krueger. 1992. "The Effects of the Minimum Wage on the Fast Food Industry." Industrial and Labor Relations Review 46: 6-12.

Lang, Kevin and Shulamit Kahn. 1998. "The Effect of the Minimum-Wage Laws on the Distribution of Employment: Theory and Evidence." Journal of Public Economics 69: 67-82.

Manning, A. 1995. "How Do We Know Real Wages Are Too High?" Quarterly Journal of Economics 110(4): 1111-25.

Neumark, David. 1999. "The Employment Effects of Recent Minimum Wage Increases: Evidence from a Pre-Specified Research Design." National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper 7171, June.

Rebitzer, James and Lowell Taylor. 1995. "The Consequences of Minimum Wage Laws: Some New Theoretical Ideas." Journal of Public Economics 56(2): 245-55.

 

Appendix: Distribution of Wage and Salary Workers Paid Hourly Rates by State, 1999

 

Number (in thousands)

Percent of All Wage and Salary Workers

 

$5.15 to $6.14

$6.15 to $7.14

$5.15 to $6.14

$6.15 to $7.14

Total

10,093

8,370

13.9

11.6

Alabama

202

146

18.1

13.1

Alaska

9

13

5.5

7.6

Arizona

200

157

15.2

11.9

Arkansas

130

101

20.9

16.2

California

1,463

1,023

17.4

12.1

Colorado

79

92

7.3

8.4

Connecticut

62

70

7.5

8.6

Delaware

22

21

10.8

10.0

DC

12

12

10.0

10.7

Florida

597

530

15.5

13.8

Georgia

267

248

13.1

12.3

Hawaii

47

29

15.0

9.4

Idaho

58

45

15.6

12.3

Illinois

428

354

13.2

10.8

Indiana

180

209

9.8

11.4

Iowa

103

91

11.2

9.9

Kansas

123

96

15.6

12.3

Kentucky

157

161

14.2

14.7

Louisiana

297

123

25.9

10.7

Maine

45

39

11.8

10.4

Maryland

125

137

9.5

10.5

Massachusetts

161

162

9.6

9.7

Michigan

341

312

11.3

10.3

Minnesota

115

121

8.0

8.4

Mississippi

146

74

22.7

11.5

Missouri

172

169

11.9

11.8

Montana

54

32

21.5

12.7

Nebraska

67

68

13.2

13.6

Nevada

60

60

11.2

11.3

New Hampshire

29

31

8.2

8.5

New Jersey

205

187

10.6

9.8

New Mexico

75

39

18.0

9.1

New York

566

395

14.8

10.3

North Carolina

247

223

12.4

11.2

North Dakota

34

29

18.3

15.9

Ohio

427

356

12.7

10.6

Oklahoma

170

126

19.6

14.5

Oregon

35

184

3.7

19.7

Pennsylvaina

454

338

13.8

10.3

Rhode Island

37

25

13.4

9.3

South Carolina

153

116

14.9

11.3

South Dakota

33

29

15.2

13.7

Tennessee

208

216

13.6

14.2

Texas

929

653

18.5

13.1

Utah

61

84

10.1

14.0

Vermont

21

20

12.4

11.5

Virginia

218

207

13.6

12.8

Washington

180

158

10.9

9.6

West Virgina

106

60

22.2

12.8

Wisconsin

157

177

8.9

10.0

Wyoming

25

19

17.8

13.8

Note: Workers in the $5.15 to $6.14 category would be directly affected by a $1.00 increase in the minimum wage. Those in the $6.15 to $7.14 category could be affected by spillovers.

Source: U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, unpublished tabulations from the Current Population Survey, 1999.


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