Since 1998, Washington State has led the nation in both
local and statewide minimum wage levels, which attracted the attention of Labor
Secretary Tom Perez who praised the state for having “the highest minimum wage
in the country for the last 15 years.” But the full picture is much less rosy
than Secretary Perez would have us believe.
In an article on Forbes.com the Freedom Foundation’s Maxfeld
Nelson put things in perspective. “Although the state’s overall job growth has
remained strong since adoption of the high minimum wage, growth in industries
with a prevalence of low-wage workers has slowed,” he reports. Citing Bureau of
Labor Statistics and Census Bureau data he writes that while Washington State’s
share of the nation’s population increased by 5.7 percent from 1998 to 2014,
and its share of total U.S. jobs increased by 6.3 percent, the state’s share of
U.S. hotel and restaurant jobs, which could have been expected to rise
commensurately, fell by 5.7 percent. Those industries are where thousands of people
the higher minimum wage was supposed to help were once employed.
In fact, while Washington’s teen unemployment rate had
roughly paralleled national trends prior to the 1998 minimum wage hike, every
year since then it has been substantially higher, and at one point reached 34
percent above the national rate.
Not content with the state’s $9.47 minimum wage, SeaTac, a
small city that depends heavily on businesses benefitting from its airport,
decided to raise its minimum to $15 an hour in a close vote in a 2013 election.
“Although the narrow drafting of the ordinance and ongoing litigation have limited
the law’s scope to a mere handful of businesses and employees,” Mr. Nelson
writes, “it is still having consequences. A parking company has added a ‘living-wage
surcharge’ to its rates. One hotel closed its restaurant and laid off 17
employees. Employees at another hotel reported losing an array of benefits,
with one stating that the $15 minimum wage ‘sounds good, but it’s not good.’”
And now Seattle has hopped on board that bandwagon with a phased-in
minimum wage, raising the minimum to $11 an hour April 1, and the rate hike
will be fully implemented by 2025. Some businesses, however, are on a sped-up
schedule, like Ritu Shah Burnham’s Z Pizza restaurant.
Even though she has only 12 employees, her business is
classified as part of a “large business franchise,” putting her on the fast
track to raising the minimum. “I’ve let one person go since April 1, I’ve cut
hours since April 1. I’ve taken them myself because I don’t pay myself,” she
told a local TV station. “I’ve also raised my prices a little bit; there’s no
other way to do it.”
One of her employees was initially excited at the advertised
benefits of getting a raise and having a better life. “If that’s the truth,” he
told the TV outlet, “I don’t think that’s very apparent. People like me are
finding themselves in a tougher situation than ever.” He will only get to enjoy
the higher pay until August, when Ms. Burnham has determined she must close her
business. “I have no idea where they’re going to find jobs, because if I’m
cutting hours, I imagine everyone is across the board,” she said.
Jake Spear, the director of 15 Now Seattle, a wage hike
advocate group, was unmoved at the plight of these 12 employees. It’s just one
restaurant, after all. “Restaurants open and close all the time, for various
reasons,” he said.
Back during the flower child era of the 1960s and 70s, the
operative slogan was, “If it feels good, do it!” That slogan has more recently
been co-opted by pandering politicians, labor union leaders, and others more
interested in the immediate rewards of increased numbers of fawning, adoring voters
and thankful union members than with the reality of lost jobs, higher consumer
prices, and struggling businesses. They have another favorite slogan, as well:
“Damn the torpedoes! Full speed ahead!”
The fallacy in the minimum wage debate is that so many
people – liberal feel-gooders, people new to the workforce, people in the most
basic jobs and/or with the lowest skill levels, along with pandering
politicians and union bosses – don’t understand the significance of varying
wage levels. It eludes them that wages must be earned, not merely given like a
gift, and that higher wages require more training, knowledge, skill and
experience from workers than lower wages do. There is more involved in earning
a high wage than just getting hired and showing up for work. You have to
contribute something positive to the business you are fortunate enough to work
for, and the greater your contribution, the more you are able to earn.
A mandated high minimum wage contributes to the entitlement mentality,
where people expect to exist without having to contribute very much to their
own well-being. This is not a positive development for a society that was built
by generations of Americans who were hard working and self-reliant.
Detroit and Baltimore are graphic examples of the failure of
liberal policies, and now we see Washington State and Seattle heading down that
same path.
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