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Minimum wage hike could hurt working poor more than help.


GOV. Arnold Schwarzenegger's recent, signing of a bill to increase California s California (kăl'ĭfôr`nyə), most populous state in the United States, located in the Far West; bordered by Oregon (N), Nevada and, across the Colorado River, Arizona (E), Mexico (S), and the Pacific Ocean (W).  minimum wage is being hailed by supporters as a victory for the poor, but economic realities tell us that this will not be the case for many poor families.

The bill increases the state's minimum wage by 18.5 percent, from $6.75 an hour to $7.50 an hour beginning January January: see month.  2007, and to $8 an hour in January 2008, making it the highest in the nation.

The bill codified cod·i·fy  
tr.v. cod·i·fied, cod·i·fy·ing, cod·i·fies
1. To reduce to a code: codify laws.

2. To arrange or systematize.
 an agreement recently announced, to much fanfare, between Gov. Schwarzenegger and Democrats in the state Legislature A state legislature may refer to a legislative branch or body of a political subdivision in a federal system.

The following legislatures exist in the following political subdivisions:
. According to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 Assembly Speaker Fabian Nunez, the deal sends the message to poor families that "we are continuing to move the ball down the field, to improve their quality of life." But legislators cannot simply increase wealth by passing a bill, and the effects of the mandatory wage increase are sure to disappoint dis·ap·point  
v. dis·ap·point·ed, dis·ap·point·ing, dis·ap·points

v.tr.
1. To fail to satisfy the hope, desire, or expectation of.

2.
.

Those forced into unemployment by the proposed minimum wage increase will certainly not have an improved quality of life. In 2004, the California Legislature passed a measure to increase the minimum wage by one dollar an hour. The increase would have imposed an estimated $2 billion in costs on businesses statewide, and a study by the Employment Policies Institute estimated that it would have resulted in the loss of nearly 19,000 jobs the year after it was to be enacted. The new $1.25 an hour increase will result in even higher costs and job losses.

To assess the merits of minimum wage advocates' arguments, all you need to do is take them to their logical extremes. If all it takes to lift people out of poverty is increasing the minimum wage, then why stop at $8 an hour? Indeed, some have called for raising it to $10 an hour or $11 an hour. But why set your sights Set Your Sights was the last single to be released by Adequate Seven from Here on Earth. It was download only. Track listing
  1. Set Your Sights
 so low as to just get full-time minimum wage earners slightly above the poverty line? Why not raise it to $20 an hour and make them members of the middle class?

Burden on employers

Clearly, economics doesn't work that way. When the minimum wage is increased, employers with minimum-wage workers are instantly burdened by higher costs. To compensate, they may lay off some employees, cut employees' hours or benefits, increase prices to consumers, and/or put off planned investment and growth in their businesses.

Minimum wage increases actually harm many of the working poor they are supposed to help. Consider two employers hiring for the same job. One is willing to pay $40,000 per year and the other is only offering $20,000 per year. Competition for the $40,000 a year job is plainly going to be fiercer than for the $20,000 a year job.

Now assume that a minimum wage bill is passed that mandates compensation of at least $40,000 a year. The $40,000 a year employee is unaffected, but the $20,000 a year employee will probably be replaced by someone with greater qualifications because the employer wants to get his money's worth. Worse still, the employee with $20,000-a-year skills has just become unemployable un·em·ploy·a·ble  
adj.
Not able to find or hold a job: unemployable people.



un
 because he does not yet have the skills to compete for a $40,000 a year job.

Value is not arbitrary. It cannot be set by decree decree, in law, decision of a suit in a court of equity. It is the counterpart in equity of the judgment in a court of law, although in those jurisdictions where law and equity have merged, judgment is sometimes used to include both. . An employee's value is what an employer is willing to pay him based on the employee's knowledge, experience, reputation, and other skills. In short, it is based on what the employee can bring to the table and how much he can contribute to the business, not on a politician's arbitrary mandate.

The effects of the minimum wage are the same whether the minimum wage is set at $40,000 a year or $8 an hour. Those employees who are worth less than $8 an hour who are not laid off will, indeed, be a little better off. But those worth between $6.75 an hour and $8 an hour who are laid off and those who are unemployed will find it even harder to compete for $8 an hour jobs because they simply don't have the skills yet, and now they don't have the means to work their way up to $8 an hour or more.

The minimum wage is harmful to businesses, consumers, and even many of the working poor advocates claim to want to help. If Gov. Schwarzenegger really wants to improve economic opportunities and California's woeful woe·ful also wo·ful  
adj.
1. Affected by or full of woe; mournful.

2. Causing or involving woe.

3. Deplorably bad or wretched:
 business climate, he should focus on measures that reduce government regulations and allow businesses to grow and add jobs.

Adam B. Summers is a policy analyst at the Reason Foundation in Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850. .
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Title Annotation:COMMENTARY
Author:Summers, Adam
Publication:Los Angeles Business Journal
Geographic Code:1U9CA
Date:Oct 2, 2006
Words:773
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