Fpi Minwage PDF
Fpi Minwage PDF
Fpi Minwage PDF
FPI Release: New York Economists In Support of a Statewide $15 Minimum Wage
Regarding concerns about the wage increase in upstate areas, Colgate Universitys Tom Michl
stated, Governor Cuomos proposal to increase the New York State minimum wage to $15
more gradually in upstate than in New York City takes account of the differences between the
upstate and city economies. I think that most working families in New York would agree that an
ambitious program to raise the minimum wage is better than a timid program that leaves millions
of New Yorkers suffering unnecessarily low or poverty"level wages. In some upstate regions, as
many as 80% of poor or near"poor workers will benefit from a higher minimum.
Anticipating the claim by some that it would be preferable to increase the Earned Income Tax
Credit (EITC) rather than the minimum wage, New School economist Teresa Ghilarducci stated,
Low wage workers get some relief from taxpayers who fund the EITC. A higher minimum
wage will lessen the burden of low wages that employers are now able to shift to taxpayers.
Ghilarducci also noted that to match the benefit to workers from a $15 minimum wage, the
states EITC would have to be roughly the same as the federal EITC, entailing more than a $2
billion increase in the cost to New York taxpayers.
The economists minimum wage statement cites the work of Michael Reich and colleagues at the
University of California at Berkeley who recently released a new comprehensive report
examining the impact of the proposed $15 minimum wage on businesses and the overall New
York economy. The Berkeley report notes that in the end, the costs of the minimum wage will
be borne by turnover reductions, productivity increases and modest price increaseswithout
adverse employment effects. 1
The economists statement concludes: We believe that a phased"in increase in the New York
State minimum wage to $15 an hour makes sound economic sense: it would be good for the
states workers and their families, good for businesses, and good for the health and sustainability
of the overall state economy.
The full text of the statement with list of signers begins on the next page.
Michael Reich, Sylvia Allegretto, Ken Jacobs and Claire Montialoux, The Effects of a $15 Minimum Wage in New
York State, University of California, Berkeley, Institute for Research on Labor and Employment, Center for Wage
and Employment Dynamics, March 2016, http://irle.berkeley.edu/cwed/briefs/2016"01.pdf
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FPI Release: New York Economists In Support of a Statewide $15 Minimum Wage
National Employment Law Project, How Much Do New Yorks Workers Need? At Least $15 per hour Both
Upstate and Down, January 2016, http://nelp.org/content/uploads/Fact"Sheet"How"Much"New"York"Workers"
Need"15.pdf.
3
David Cooper, Raising the New York State Minimum Wage to $15 by July 2021 Would Lift Wages for 3.2 Million
Workers, Economic Policy Institute, January 5, 2016, http://www.epi.org/publication/raising"new"york"state"
minimum"wage"to"15/.
4
Ibid.
5
Chuck Marr, Chye"Ching Huang, Arloc Sherman, and Brandon Debot, EITC and Child Tax Credit Promote Work,
Reduce Poverty, and Support Childrens Development, Research Finds, Center on Budget and Policy Priorities,
October 1, 2015, http://www.cbpp.org/research/federal"tax/eitc"and"child"tax"credit"promote"work"reduce"poverty"
and"support"childrens.
2
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FPI Release: New York Economists In Support of a Statewide $15 Minimum Wage
governments spend approximately $2.9 billion in public programs. 6 The Earned Income Tax
Credit (EITC) is a complementary policy to a higher minimum wage, it is not a substitute for
raising the wage floor as some have suggested.
Opponents also frequently argue that studies show minimum wage increases lead to job losses or
reduced employment opportunities for low"wage workers because businesses are less willing to
hire workers at the increased wage level. These assertions are based on outdated and flawed
research that overstate job impacts of minimum wage policies. Instead, metastudies (analyses
that survey the minimum wage research field and aggregate findings from many studies) show
that the majority of newer, credible studies come to the opposite conclusion: Policies raising the
wage floor increase the take"home pay of affected workers without hurting employment levels
overall. This is in part explained by the positive effects of higher wages for businesses, which
benefit from reduced levels of turnover, savings from reduced spending in recruiting and training
new workers as a result of the lower turnover, higher morale and productivity, and improved
customer service. 7 Additionally, higher wages can result in increased consumer spending and
increased sales for local businesses.
It is no wonder, then, that more than 200 economists nationwide have endorsed a $15 minimum
wage, stating that this will be an effective means of improving living standards for low"wage
workers and their families and will help stabilize the economy. The costs to other groups in
society will be modest and readily absorbed. 8 This sentiment is echoed by leading economist
and Nobel laureate, Paul Krugman, who, in recent comments at the City University of New
York, cited the new body of research on the minimum wage as one of the most compelling sets
of empirical results Ive ever seen in economics...Theres absolutely no reason to think that a
fifteen dollar minimum wage will be a problem for New York. 9
We recognize that raising New Yorks minimum wage to $15 an hour would entail an increase
that is outside of past experience in New York or elsewhere at the state or federal levels.
However, Gov. Cuomos proposal is a well"designed plan that phases"in the higher wage over
time, and with consideration for the different economies Upstate and in New York City. Outside
of New York City, annual increases would be 10 percent or less, well within the range of most
minimum wage increases. The timeline of the proposed increase will ensure that businesses are
able to absorb the added labor costs through modest increases in prices and productivity, and by
enabling them to incorporate into their revised business plans a slightly larger share of total
Ken Jacobs, Ian Perry and Jenifer MacGillvary, The Public Costs of Low Wages in New York, UC Berkeley Labor
Center, January 2016, http://laborcenter.berkeley.edu/pdf/2016/Public"Cost"of"Low"Wages"in"New"York.pdf.
7 National Employment Law Project, and Fiscal Policy Institute, Fact Checking the Empire Center/American Action
Forum Analysis of New Yorks Proposed $15 Minimum Wage: Flawed Methods Produce Erroneous Results,
November 2015, http://nelp.org/publication/fact"checking"the"empire"centeramerican"action"forum"analysis"of"
new"yorks"proposed"15"minimum"wage"flawed"methods"produce"erroneous"results/.
8
Some of the Nations Leading Economists Support a $15 an Hour Minimum Wage, July 2015,
http://www.budget.senate.gov/democratic/public/_cache/files/89efe4b6"8934"4375"bc96"758fcc791622/minimum"
wage"petition"july"21.pdf.
9
A Conversation between Paul Krugman and Janet Gornick: From the Equality Indicators conference on October
1, 2015, Institute for State and Local Governance, http://equalityindicators.org/media/.
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FPI Release: New York Economists In Support of a Statewide $15 Minimum Wage
revenues to go towards wages. Business profits per worker have increased twice as fast as wages
in New York since 2001. 10
If Gov. Cuomos proposal is approved, New York would be the first state in the nation to adopt a
$15 wage floor for all workers. However, other jurisdictions precede the Empire State. The small
port city of SeaTac was in fact the first to require a $15 minimum wage for airport and travel
industry workers, followed by San Francisco, Seattle, Los Angeles City and County and others
followed with $15 an hour minimum wage policies for workers in all sectors. 11
A new study by economist Michael Reich and colleagues at the University of California at
Berkeley carefully worked through the likely effects of a phased"in increase to $15 in New York
State, examining the impacts on business operating costs and modeling the implications for
overall consumer demand of higher wages for 37 percent of the states workforce. The
methodology used in the Berkeley study is straightforward and appropriate in modeling the
impacts on businesses and the overall economy. The Berkeley study concludes that the net
employment and economic effects would be very small in relation to the size of New Yorks
economy; the net employment increase would be 3,200 jobs, a fraction of a percent of the states
overall workforce. 12 Businesses would see savings from reduced turnover and improved worker
morale and productivity, and the adverse effects of slight price increases in some industriesstill
well below annual inflationwould be offset by the greater sales resulting from higher wages
for a large number of workers. The tiny net economic impact from an increase over time to $15
is accompanied by a significant improvement in living standards for 3.16 million workers37
percent of the states workforce.
For all of the above reasons, we believe that a phased"in increase in the New York State
minimum wage to $15 an hour makes sound economic sense: it would be good for the states
workers and their families, good for businesses, and good for the health and sustainability of the
overall state economy.
Signed,
(Affiliations are given for identification purposes only.)
Leon J. Battista, Bronx Community College"CUNY
Lourdes Beneria, Cornell University
Howard Botwinick, SUNY Cortland
10
Fiscal Policy Institute, Business profits in New York State have grown much faster than wages since 2001;
minimum wage hike is a good corrective, Data Brief, December 1, 2015. http://bit.ly/1YHIzl8
11
National Employment law Project, $15 Laws and Current Campaigns, http://raisetheminimumwage.org/pages/15"
Laws"Current"Campaigns.
12
Michael Reich, Sylvia Allegretto, Ken Jacobs and Claire Montialoux, The Effects of a $15 Minimum Wage in New
York State, University of California, Berkeley, Institute for Research on Labor and Employment, Center for Wage
and Employment Dynamics, March 2016, http://irle.berkeley.edu/cwed/briefs/2016"01.pdf
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FPI Release: New York Economists In Support of a Statewide $15 Minimum Wage
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FPI Release: New York Economists In Support of a Statewide $15 Minimum Wage
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FPI Release: New York Economists In Support of a Statewide $15 Minimum Wage
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