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What the US gets wrong about minimum wage - YouTube
Channel: Vox
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This is an American sweatshop.
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They flourished in the early 1900s, when people
were desperate for work.
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And since there were no regulations on what
they had to pay,
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they paid workers next to nothing.
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So the US adopted something that had already
worked in other countries:
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a minimum wage.
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This is a chart of the minimum wage in the
United States over the past 60 years.
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You can see how it’s gone up, and up, and
up: from a dollar an hour in 1960
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to $7.25 today.
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Go America, right?
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But this chart is actually pretty misleading.
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If you take the same line, but adjust it for
inflation, you’ll see the problem.
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Every time the minimum wage has been raised,
inflation has dragged it right back down.
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Really, America’s minimum wage hasn’t
gone up.
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It’s essentially stayed the same since the
80s.
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What you’re seeing here — this constant
up and down — this is weird.
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It’s not how the rest of the world does
it and it leads to a bunch of problems for
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American workers and businesses.
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But it doesn’t have to be this way.
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The minimum wage sets the smallest amount
that a business anywhere in the country can
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pay its workers each hour.
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But when that first bill became law in 1938,
it had one big problem.
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That first law didn’t actually set any kind
of guidance on when and how you’re supposed
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to raise the minimum wage in the future.
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That meant that if the minimum wage was going
to go up,
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Congress would have to pass a new law.
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That’s what these steps are.
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But as we already know, they aren’t occurring
enough to keep up with inflation.
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And this system also makes the US minimum
wage sort of unpredictable.
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Look at this period.
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Starting in 1997, the minimum wage sat at
$5.15 an hour for 10 years.
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Then, it was raised in 2007 to $7.25 by 2009.
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Cool, but that’s a 40% increase in a pretty short time,
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after a decade of inaction.
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How do you plan for that if you own a business?
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Not having that consistency does raise a lot
of problems for business owners.
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Will they have to lay off employees, will
they have to reduce work hours, or will they
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just raise prices on their customers?
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Imagine how much smoother that could all go
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if the minimum wage just kind of went up over time?
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Well, we don’t have to imagine it.
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In France, they automatically raise their
minimum wage every single year.
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They tie it to inflation and the average salary
of a French worker.
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In Australia, a commission reviews the minimum
wage every year,
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considering economic factors like inflation.
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The UK also has a commission made up of union,
business and economic experts.
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The Czech Republic’s commission consults
with employer and union representatives.
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Their line is lower overall than America’s,
but it still trends upwards.
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Same with Costa Rica.
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And their committee reviews the minimum wage
twice a year.
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In most countries, the minimum wage is in
the hands of economic officials.
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In the US, it’s in the hands of politicians.
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And that goes about as well as you’d expect.
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Today the federal minimum wage is a poverty
wage.
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Last thing we need are more one-size-fits-all
Washington mandate.
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It could eliminate up to 3.7 million jobs.
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It would lift 1.3 million Americans out of
poverty.
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Raise the wage for 33 million people, a quarter
of the workforce.
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Those wages are only available if you get
hired.
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Working people are doing their jobs, let us
do ours.
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Republicans have generally resisted increasing
the minimum wage.
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They tend to support a lot of pro-business
policies and business leaders do not want
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minimum wage increases.
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Democrats on the other hand, they have a lot
of support from labor unions so they’re
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the ones who are usually pushing for an increase to the minimum wage.
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So that’s why Congress rarely agrees on
raising the minimum wage.
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And what makes America’s system different than other
countries.
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This chart shows how much a minimum wage worker
makes compared to the average worker, in every
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developed country with a minimum wage.
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All these countries have some kind of commission
or formula to determine what the minimum wage
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should be.
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And they review it every year or two.
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And then there’s the US.
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Who does neither and is dead last.
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If the US had done something similar, like
tie the minimum wage to the average wage each
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year, we’d be here.
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Not amazing, but not an outlier.
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What we're talking about is the federal minimum wage,
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which applies to everyone
who works in America.
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But states can set their own too, and about
half of them currently have a higher
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minimum wage than the federal one.
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Like Washington State, which in 1998 decided
to raise theirs every single year,
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base on inflation.
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Sound familiar?
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I mean it’s such a logical idea, it's done in other countries.
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It really doesn’t make sense that it’s not done at the federal level.
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Like really it’s just
about politics.
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Right now politicians are yet again debating
what the minimum wage should be.
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Should it be $15, $11, or should it not be
raised at all.
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But maybe the solution to this never-ending
debate, is to just take the decision out of
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politician’s hands.
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