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Jim Hightower
Jim Hightower
15 May 2013
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Our Disgraceful Minimum Wage

Comment

In natural terms, our economy is a giant sequoia. Unfortunately, our present corporate and governmental leadership can't seem to grasp one of the basic laws of nature: You can't keep a mighty tree alive (much less have it thrive) by only spritzing the fine leaves at the tippy-top. The fate of the whole tree depends on nurturing the roots.

Sadly, we're led by a myopic crew of leaf-spritzers.

Elites in Washington, on Wall Street and in the corporate suites have taken exquisite care of themselves. Blithely oblivious to the dangerous shriveling of the roots, they've increased their take by offshoring our middle-class jobs, slashing American wages and benefits, busting the ability of unions to fight back, deregulating their nefarious corporate and financial operations, dodging their tax obligations, privatizing and gutting public services (from schools to food stamps), and turning our elections into auctions run by and for billionaires, thus robbing America itself of its unifying ethos: economic fairness and social justice.

One of the least excusable of today's injustices is that in this country of unsurpassed wealth, it's an abomination that the power elites are casually tolerating poverty pay as our wage floor. How deplorable that they can actually juxtapose the words "working" and "poor" without blinking, much less blushing.

Nearly 4 million Americans are being paid at or below the desiccated federal minimum wage of $7.25 an hour. For a single mother with two kids, that's $4,000 a year beneath the poverty level. Where are the ethics in a "work ethic" that rewards so many with paychecks that deliberately hold them in poverty?

Consider the kind of life $7.25 buys. At that rate, a full-time worker is taking in only $1,250 a month, before payroll taxes. Try stretching that over the basics of rent, utilities, groceries and gas. Need car repair? Lose your job? What if you get sick? Good luck.

Corporate politicos and front groups have draped a thick tapestry of myths and excuses over the miserly wage.

"The only people paid the minimum," goes one of their oldest dodges, "are teenagers working part-time summer jobs for extra cash." In fact, only 6.4 percent of these low-wage employees are teen part-timers. Contrary to the stereotype, the typical minimum-wage worker is an adult, white woman (including many single moms) whose family relies on her paycheck.

The right-wingosphere argues that lifting the wage floor would keep employers from hiring. Not true. The reason corporations aren't hiring is that consumers aren't purchasing their products, thanks to the economic realities of lost jobs, wage cuts and inflation that have shrunk the buying power of working families.

The one simple step that would immediately add juice to the consumer economy (which accounts for two-thirds of America's economic activity) is to do the one thing that boneheaded lawmakers adamantly refuse even to consider: Raise the spending power of millions of low-wage workers by hiking the legal minimum wage. Raising it to $10 an hour would elevate 30 million hardworking Americans now paid a poverty or near-poverty level income. While it would still be tough to raise a family on a $10-an-hour wage ($20,800 a year), it does move our country a lot closer to the principle that work ought to be fairly rewarded, restoring a measure of ethics to the work ethic.

Such a percolate-up solution would provide a huge and direct lift out of our present doldrums — a study last year by Chicago's Federal Reserve Bank found that every dollar increase in the minimum wage produces an immediate bump in the next year of $2,800 per recipient in consumer purchases of everything from kids' shoes to vehicles. The Economic Policy Institute (EPI) reported in a 2009 study that even a boost to $9.50 an hour would result in $30 billion a year in new consumer spending.

Numerous in-depth studies show that hiking the wage does not cause either small businesses or giants like McDonald's to rush out and slash their workforce in order to offset the relatively small cost of paying employees a bit better. To the contrary, most studies show that overall job numbers go up.

The public is overwhelmingly behind the increase. This June, a Zogby Analytics survey of likely voters found seven out of 10 supporting a raise above $10 an hour (including 54 percent of Republicans). Notably, 71 percent of young people (18 to 23 years old) favored it. Likewise, last November's "American Values Survey" by the Public Religion Research Institute showed two-thirds of Americans in favor of a $10-per-hour minimum.

The super-rich are fast separating their good fortunes from the well-being of the many. It's not just America's economy they're skewing, but our values. They're destroying the place where egalitarianism, upward mobility and the middle class once had a welcoming home. That's the fight we're in — a historic fight to decide who we Americans really are.

To find out more about Jim Hightower, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate webpage at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2012 CREATORS.COM



Comments

6 Comments | Post Comment
Mr. Hightower. Perhaps we would be better off letting skils level and demand drive labor rates. Artificially fixing the value of labor only serves to drive up costs and forces manufacturers to seek cheaper labor elsewhere.
Comment: #1
Posted by: david
Wed Sep 19, 2012 8:17 AM
Busting up unions he says. Unions are just as bad as the "evil corperations" he speaks of. Jim, I want you to compare the salary of a public union shadowboss with that of a corperate exec. Not much difference. But don't let the facts get in the way of going after the right people in your mind. And where in this article do you mention the fact that people are responsible for their own choices. Government will not always be around to save people form their poor choices. If you make minimum wage, you should not be a single mom in the first place. You marry a rich guy and then have kids duh.
Comment: #2
Posted by: Chris McCoy
Wed Sep 19, 2012 9:30 AM
INCREASE THE MINIMUM WAGE IMMEDIATELY
Comment: #3
Posted by: THE PROPHET
Fri Sep 21, 2012 10:54 AM
Raising the minimum wage to $10 an hour is a bit much, don't you think? All the people who started at $7.25 or $8 an hour and have been working at a company for about 5 years and finally got to $10 an hour will then be equal with a new hiree? I don't see this working in the real world. There has to be increase for everyone, not just those who are on the bottom rung of society. If there was an equal increase across the board, then fine. Of course, I'm not talking about those in corporate executive positions, but those who are working an hourly wage. To just focus on those making minimum wage is not really solving the entire problem. And it will not really be fair to those who have worked for years to earn $10 an hour, who now are making about the same as someone fresh off the street.
Comment: #4
Posted by: Jesus Christ
Fri Sep 21, 2012 11:14 AM
This became the way Richard Nixon began to serve payback for the Civli Rights Movement by tampering with the wage during his administration. Some wages of the working class were allowed to be 'frozen' while the inflation continued to rise. That certainly did widen the gap between the haves and havenots. Now the minimum wage (the minimal amount to be paid for a service) is completely out of touch with the economic decline, and inflation reigns supreme once again. Just try to survive on minimum wage while working any job today!
Comment: #5
Posted by: Luther Norman
Fri Sep 21, 2012 5:47 PM
In Jims liberal fantasyland I'm sure raising the minimum wage will work out just as he predicited. It won't in reality. If you really want to help out the min wagers, then you have to end the fed, restore the currency, pop the bubbles, and stop inflation. Jim is barking up the wrong tree here.
Comment: #6
Posted by: Chris McCoy
Sun Sep 23, 2012 3:59 PM
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