The Daily - The Fight for (and Against) a $15 Minimum Wage
Episode Date: March 17, 2021The passage of the stimulus package last week ushered in an expansion of the social safety net that Democrats have celebrated. But one key policy was not included: a doubling of the federal minimum wa...ge to $15 an hour.  Today, we look at the history of that demand, and the shifting political and economic arguments for and against it. Guest: Ben Casselman, an economics and business reporter for The New York Times. Sign up here to get The Daily in your inbox each morning. And for an exclusive look at how the biggest stories on our show come together, subscribe to our newsletter. Background reading: Earlier this month, a group of senators from both sides of the aisle declined to advance a federal minimum wage increase to $15 an hour.The politics of a higher minimum wage are increasingly muddled, but some Republicans are gravitating toward the idea, citing the economic needs of working-class Americans.For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily.Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro.
This is The Daily.
Even as President Biden and congressional Democrats
celebrate a historic expansion of the social safety net
with the passage of the stimulus bill,
they acknowledge that one key policy did not make it in,
a doubling of the federal minimum wage to $15 an hour.
Today, as Biden vows to do whatever it takes to get to $15,
my colleague Shira Frankel spoke with economics reporter Ben Castleman
about what a growing body of data tells us might happen
and might not happen if that occurs.
It's Wednesday, March 17th.
So Ben, first of all, what's the minimum wage and who earns it?
So the federal minimum wage is $7.25 an hour.
It's been set at that level since 2009.
And there are only about 400,000 workers who earn the federal minimum wage.
That's in 2019, which is not that many people,
in part because it's been so long that many state and local governments have actually gone ahead
and raised their own minimum wages. But there are still 8 million workers who earn less than $10 an
hour, 40 million workers, give or take, who earn less than $15 an hour. Many of them work in fast food or cleaning hotel rooms.
Nearly 60% of them are women.
They're disproportionately Black and Hispanic.
They're disproportionately young,
although many of them are still over the age of 25.
Okay, how did we get here?
Like, take us back to the very beginning of how the federal minimum wage was first established.
So the first federal minimum wage was passed in 1938.
My friends, five years ago,
we faced a very serious problem
of economic and social recovery.
Under Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
And it comes out of this moment of the Great Depression.
And so we've had this period of just colossal disruption
in the American economy, right?
Massive unemployment, incredibly high rates of poverty and suffering.
Consequently, I am again expressing my hope
that the Congress will enact at this session
a wage and hour bill putting a floor under industrial wages and a limit on working hours
to ensure a better distribution of our prosperity, a better distribution of available work, and
a sounder distribution of buying power.
And we get the first push of the New Deal.
We get a lot of efforts to try to put people to work, but also to make sure that they are
able to make enough money to feed their families.
For to reach a port, we must sail.
Sail, not lie at anchor. Sail, not drift.
And the minimum wage was initially part of that push, but it got blocked by the Supreme Court.
Supreme Court. And so it's actually not until 1938 that the federal government is actually able to impose the first minimum wage, which was at the time 25 cents an hour. So before 1938, there's
just no floor? You could literally pay people anything you want? There's no floor. There were
some efforts to have industries regulate wages, but for all intents and purposes, if you could
find somebody to work for a given rate, then you could pay them that rate. And so what was the reaction
to the first minimum wage when it was announced? Well, you know, what's interesting is that going
back all the way to the start of this, the minimum wage has been just consistently an extremely extremely popular policy. I found a 1937 Gallup poll where 69% of the public supported a federal
minimum wage. So this is something that has had broad public support basically from the very
beginning. So from there, what happens? How frequently is the federal minimum wage increased?
So it kind of goes up every few years. You know, this was always controlled by Congress.
And so it's not like it just automatically rose with the cost of living.
But, you know, we started with 25 cents an hour in 1938.
That kind of goes up to 30 cents the next year to 40 cents in 45.
We finally crossed to a dollar in 56.
By the late 60s, we're at $1.40 and $1.60.
And we finally get up to $2 an hour in 1974.
And then in the 1980s, it kind of stops.
We get suddenly close to a decade with no increase in the minimum wage.
Why? What happens in the 1980s?
Well, I mean, the short version is that Ronald Reagan is elected.
And we get this sort of conservative revolution
where the ideas of the free market are sort of dominant
in a lot of American policymaking.
There was this argument that it was going to be a job killer.
This is something
that you heard from businesses, particularly small businesses, from the very beginning. And
it's kind of a natural thing to think, right? If you think about the price for anything else,
if you raise the price of bananas or bicycles or iPhones, we would expect demand for that item
to fall. And so if we're raising the price of
labor, raising the price that you have to pay workers, then you would expect for companies
to hire fewer of them. And I think that this was a widely held belief, right? This was not just,
you know, some right-wingers or some, you know, hard conservatives who were arguing
this. You know, the New York Times editorial page in 1987, I'm looking at an editorial of theirs
right here. The headline is, the right minimum wage, zero dollars. That's interesting. And so,
the New York Times editorial page is supporting this underlying philosophy that Reagan's
introducing. Yeah, I mean, look, so there are two things happening here. There's an ideological moment in America at that point under Reagan where, you know, this is the
era of government isn't the solution, government is the problem. But we're also at a time when
a lot of economists and not only conservative economists would have said that the minimum wage,
if maybe zero isn't the right number,
but certainly that the too high a minimum wage would carry a real threat to employment and that
there were better ways of trying to help the poor. Remember, this is the 80s, right? This is a period
of rising inequality. This is a period where for many people, for certainly the wealthy, this was
a very good time in the economy. But there was
the beginnings of these fears of inequality that we're now seeing. And I think you can certainly
link that back in part to this stagnation of the minimum wage during that period.
So what happens after the Reagan years in the 90s and the early 2000s?
You know, we got some increases under Clinton. We got some increases under George W. Bush.
But then the minimum wage has stalled since 2009.
The last president to actually get a minimum wage increase
through Congress was George W. Bush.
That was, you know, right in the teeth
of the Great Recession, right?
The worst recession since the Great Depression.
We then get this very long, tortured recovery from that,
where for much of it, low-wage workers are really not seeing any wage gains.
And then we finally get this period at the end of it
when the unemployment rate is low and the economy is doing better and wages are rising, but still not for minimum wage workers. And then, of course,
for the past year, we've had the pandemic. So it's been a remarkable decade plus for the economy,
but for minimum wage workers, they've seen none of the gains during that period.
But underneath all of that, starting in 2012,
there's this grassroots movement,
progressive activists of unions to push for not just a higher federal minimum wage,
but a doubling, a more than doubling of the minimum wage
to $15 an hour, what became known as the fight for 15.
We'll be right back.
Ben, what did people think about the grassroots movement for the Fight for 15?
Well, I can tell you what I thought. I was a
reporter at the Wall Street Journal at the time covering the economy. And in 2012, I started to
get press releases about minimum wage workers who were walking out to demand higher pay at
McDonald's. I started seeing demonstrations and protests. And I'll be honest, I was pretty dismissive of it at the time. I think
a lot of economics reporters were. For one thing, because it just seemed politically impossible.
You know, this is a moment when even Democrats were not remotely on board with a minimum wage
of $15. You know, President Obama was talking about a huge increase in the minimum wage
to $10.10. And as recently as 2016, in the presidential campaign, Hillary Clinton was
talking about a $12 minimum wage. She wasn't on board with a $15 minimum wage nationally.
So the political moment just wasn't there for this to happen. But I think it
was also the conventional wisdom that this would be much too much for the economy, that the notion
of setting a minimum wage that high at the federal level just seemed crazy, I think, to a lot of
economists and frankly, probably to a lot of us who were covering it at the time. So why did they land on $15?
Well, so the argument among the grassroots was that $15 was what it took to actually
have a living wage.
It was this argument that the minimum wage ought to be a wage that you could actually
live on.
And they came up with $15 as a reasonable number for that.
Look, it's also a catchy round number.
$15 is a reasonable number for that.
Look, it's also a catchy round number.
I don't think, you know, there's any mystery that the fight for $15 was a better slogan than, you know, fight for $14.85 or whatever the algorithm might have spit out.
But the idea was that the minimum wage ought to be a living wage.
So other than the alliteration being good, what did they do to convince people like you
that this was a good idea?
Well, you know, the Fight for 15 movement did a couple of things early on.
We demand victory!
We demand victory!
One thing they did is they put a lot of pressure on individual companies.
McDonald's!
McDonald's!
McDonald's!
They said McDonald's ought to be able to pay more.
Walmart ought to be able to pay more.
Let's put political pressure on them to raise their pay.
The McDonald's headquarters in Oak Brook is ground zero for the Fight for 15 minimum wage battle.
Hundreds of protesters spent the night there in tents,
and this morning they're also hoping to influence McDonald's shareholders.
And at the same time, they did a lot of fighting at the state and local level.
In San Francisco, one of the most expensive cities in America.
Several major U.S. cities, including San Francisco and Seattle, have approved minimum wage increases.
Others, such as New York City and Washington, D.C., are considering them now.
in D.C. are considering them now.
And so, at first, this experiment is mostly playing out in some high-cost-of-living sort of progressive cities.
But then it starts to spread.
In 2016, California, the whole state,
so not just San Francisco, but Fresno and the Central Valley,
gets a higher minimum wage.
In 2016, Arizona voters vote on a minimum wage bill.
Illinois votes on a minimum wage bill. And eventually, by the time we get to the present
day, there are 28 states plus the District of Columbia that have raised their minimum wage since January of 2014.
And so, as you might imagine, economists rushed in to study this.
And as you also might expect, if you've ever paid attention to economists,
they don't all agree with each other.
But I think that there is sort of a broad takeaway from the studies that have been done,
which is that the damage of these higher minimum wages is not nearly as significant as many people feared.
Some of these studies find basically no job losses
from these higher minimum wages.
Some of them find modest job loss,
but generally not of the kind of disastrous scale
that we might have predicted.
And at the same time, these higher minimum wages bring real benefits for those workers.
They are bringing higher pay.
They bring higher pay not just for the workers earning the minimum wage,
but also for workers who are earning a bit more than that,
who can now go to their managers and say,
come on, that 16-year-old is earning the minimum wage.
Like, you're not going to pay me the same as him.
And so we are seeing this play out in the form of these higher wages without the sort of disastrous consequences
that I think a lot of people would have predicted.
But when all the workers are getting a raise,
even beyond the lowest wage workers to a broader set of people,
how can that not be bad for business?
Yeah, I mean, I think it's a good
question, right? Because when we talked earlier about that sort of idea of a simple supply and
demand market, if we raise the costs for employers, how could they not need to cut workers? And I
think that the answer is that there's a growing body of evidence that the real world does not work the way that simple supply and demand
model suggests. So let me give an example of that. If my labor is worth, call it,
$8 an hour, and my employer tries to pay me only $7.25, in a simple supply and demand model,
I'm not going to that 725 job.
I'm gonna walk out the door
and find somebody who'll pay me eight bucks an hour.
I'd be crazy to stick around.
But in the real world,
it can be more complicated than that.
It might feel really risky for me to quit my job.
It might be really hard for me to pick up
and move across town for the job
that pays me $8 an hour. Or maybe I don't know that my
real worth is $8 an hour and my employer is paying me $7.25 and I think that that's just
what the market will bear. And so there are a lot of different ways in which employers can end up
paying workers less than that simple supply and demand model might suggest they ought to.
Got it. So actually, workers and companies don't shift around as much and as easily
as economists thought they would. Right. But I should add that we've been talking here as if
the only potential cost of the minimum wage is lost jobs. And it's more complicated than that, too. There are ways
that the minimum wage could play out in the real world that has other potentially negative effects.
So, for example, it may be that we keep the same number of jobs in total, but it becomes harder for
teenagers to get jobs. Because if I'm going to have to pay 15 bucks an hour,
I'm not going to hire some 16-year-old to do the work.
Or the minimum wage could be more damaging
for small businesses than for large businesses
because the bigger businesses are in a better position
to pay those higher wages.
So it's been notable during this recent debate,
for example, that Amazon
not only came out a few years ago and said that they were going to start paying at least $15 an
hour to all their workers, but they've also come out and been advertising heavily and lobbying
heavily in favor of a $15 an hour minimum wage. And there are a lot of small businesses
that see that and get a little suspicious,
that say, if Amazon is for this,
that can't possibly be good news for small businesses.
And maybe this is basically a way for Amazon
and for other big companies to gain yet another advantage
over smaller businesses
that are already struggling to compete.
And we still have not seen these kinds of higher minimum wages in most of the truly low-income,
low-cost-of-living parts of the country. And to the extent that we have, we don't have a lot of
evidence from those places yet because the increases have been recent.
So I think that there are still questions out there
about how this plays out as it rolls out across the country.
But I do think that it is safe to say
that the weight of the evidence has shifted
and that the weight of the views of economists
have shifted with it.
If we were having this conversation 20 or maybe even 10 years ago, I think the conversation we'd be having was
about how economists thought this was a terrible idea and would be hugely damaging, even if it was
popular in the public. And the conversation that we're having now is much more nuanced. It's, yes,
there may be some costs, but there are also some
benefits. Some economists will argue those costs are larger, others smaller, but it's not this
sort of consensus view that this is a bad idea that it once was. So I'm wondering if the political
thinking has also shifted on this. Yeah, the politics of this have shifted maybe even more
dramatically than the economics. If you think back
to earlier when I said that Hillary Clinton did not support a $15 minimum wage when she was running
in 2016, in 2020, virtually every major Democratic candidate was advocating for a $15 minimum wage.
And of course, Biden, who, you know,
was the sort of moderate in the field,
has come in and has been pushing for a $15 minimum wage.
So there has been this dramatic shift
where it was kind of a fringe idea,
even among Democrats,
to being very much the mainstream position
of the Democratic Party.
But mainstream does not mean
that it has the votes necessary to get there.
And what we saw in the Senate recently is that there still are not the crucial 50 Democratic
votes to push a $15 minimum wage across the finish line. So what about the Republicans?
The Republican discussion is more complicated. There is certainly some support in the Republican caucus for raising the minimum wage.
Mitt Romney and Tom Cotton, two Republican senators, came out earlier this even the idea of a federal minimum wage or who certainly don't think that it should be raised quickly.
That sort of Reagan influence remains in place.
So if President Biden and the Democrats decide that ultimately, in the face of immigration reform, climate policies, solving COVID and all the other priorities they have. This isn't going to be their
legislative priority. What is going to happen to the federal minimum wage? Are we going to keep
having states raising their wage and keeping with the cost of living, private companies deciding to
raise their minimum wage incrementally, but the federal government just staying out of this
argument? It's a great question, and it's a hard one to answer. I think we will continue to see this push at the state and local level.
I think we'll continue to see the push at the private industry level.
But look, there are some states that are just not going to raise their minimum wages.
And in fact, there are states that are blocking more progressive cities in those states from raising their minimum wages.
So at the end of the day, the federal policy still matters.
You know, it's interesting,
this is such a partisan issue among elected officials, but it's not that partisan among the public. You know, Florida voters in November voted for Donald Trump, as we all know, but they
also voted to raise the minimum wage there.
And there are a number of polls out there
that show not just that a majority of Americans
support a $15 minimum wage,
but that a significant share of Republicans,
in some cases a majority of Republicans,
support a much higher federal minimum wage
than we have right now.
So the politics of this are not as simple as they might first appear.
But I think that there is a real possibility that progressives will hold out for 15,
and that moderates will not come around to that number, and that there's a stalemate,
and that the result is that we stall out and that we remain in
a place where a worker in America can work 40 hours a week, 52 weeks a year and earn only $15,000.
That's the world that we're in right now. And with each passing year,
it gets even harder to get by on that wage.
year, it gets even harder to get by on that wage.
Thank you, Ben.
Thanks so much.
We'll be right back. Here's what else you need to know today.
A major U.S. intelligence report, declassified on Tuesday, found that Russian President Vladimir Putin authorized extensive efforts to interfere in the 2020 election,
to interfere in the 2020 election,
seeking to hurt President Biden's candidacy by, among other things,
spreading misleading information
through allies of President Trump.
The report did not identify those allies,
but it appeared to reference Rudy Giuliani,
a Trump lawyer who repeatedly leveled
baseless accusations of corruption
against Biden and his family.
The report concluded that China considered efforts to influence the presidential race,
but unlike Russia, decided that any such operation would fail and most likely backfire.
Today's episode was produced by Nina Potok, Sidney Harper, and Luke Vanderplug.
It was edited by Paige Cowett and Lisa Chow, and engineered by Marion Lozano.
That's it for The Daily.
I'm Michael Bolvaro.
See you tomorrow.