Less than a month into their control of the House, over 190 Democrats co-sponsored the Raise the Wage Act, which would raise the federal minimum wage to $15 an hour in the next five years—more than double the current $7.25 level. While advocates are pointing to a new Congressional Budget Office (CBO) report on the effects of the proposal as vindication, there are too many holes in the proposal and in CBO’s estimate to be taken as gospel. The Raise the Wage Act and other proposals to implement a massive minimum wage hike would in reality contribute to millions of Americans losing their jobs.
Advocates for a $15 per hour minimum wage seized on CBO’s finding that such a hike would boost the wages of 17 million workers currently working below this level and that another 10 million workers could see a boost in their wages. This increase would lead to 1.3 million Americans being lifted above the poverty line. But this is like evaluating the health impacts of chocolate cake only by measuring how much it satisfies a sugar craving. Mandating an increase in the minimum hourly wage would, yes, cause some Americans to see higher earnings.
However, just like chocolate cake has negative health impacts, a minimum wage hike has significant drawbacks. The concern raised by opponents of a drastic minimum wage increase is that it would lead to other workers losing their jobs as employers struggle to handle the increased payroll. And on that count, the CBO’s analysis seems to confirm the worst fears about what a minimum wage increase could mean. The agency warns that an increase to $15 an hour would cause 1.3 million Americans to become unemployed, and that could rise to as high as 3.7 million workers being let go from their jobs over the next five years. These job losses are conveniently ignored by minimum wage hike advocates.
Those supporting a higher minimum wage have also ignored the burden businesses would face to comply with the new mandate. If employers tried to absorb the higher labor costs, their margins would tighten as the cost to pay each employee increases. This increased expense would almost certainly be passed onto consumers through higher prices. This effect would also hit lower- and middle-class families the hardest because it would require them to dedicate a greater share of their paychecks to suddenly more-expensive necessities. The CBO finds that while real family income would increase by $8 billion for those below the poverty line with a minimum wage increase to $15 an hour, it would fall for everyone else by twice that amount.
The CBO’s report shows that raising the minimum wage is not the cure for stagnant wages that advocates believe it to be. This makes sense, as the share of minimum wage workers is small and getting ever smaller. Just 2.1 percent of hourly workers made minimum wage in 2018, a significant drop-off from the 13.4 percent level recorded in 1979 when the Bureau of Labor Statistics started recording the figure.