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  • There's a movement in cities across the country to raise the minimum wage to $15

  • per hour.

  • One of the most prominent advocates is former labor secretary

  • Robert Reich who thinks that $15 per hour should be the minimum wage for

  • the entire country, this is a bad idea.

  • Here are three reasons why, first of all, it would kill jobs.

  • One of the basic lessons of economics is that when the price of something goes up,

  • people buy less of it, so,

  • if the price of pumpkin lattes rises you can expect consumers to buy fewer of them.

  • This law of demand also effects the market for

  • low-skilled workers, raising the minimum wage means a higher

  • cost of employing each worker which makes workers less affordable than before.

  • Our coffee shop won't keep a worker at a mandated $15 per hour if that worker's

  • efforts only result in $7.25 per hour in added revenue.

  • Over the course of the year, a shop that keeps such a worker full-time would

  • lose $15,500, so instead, it would eliminate that job and

  • evidence shows that employers in fact do respond in this way to minimum wage hikes.

  • Recent research by economists Jeffrey Clemens and

  • Michael Wither finds that 1.4 million jobs were destroyed in the late 2000s when

  • the minimum wage rose across all 50 states by an average of nearly 30%, and worse,

  • those job losses were probably suffered by the people who need jobs the most.

  • This fact brings us to reason number 2,

  • the minimum wage actually hurts the people we most want to help.

  • When the minimum wage rises, the workers fired first and the ones hired last

  • are those who employers judge to be the least productive, the inner city teen

  • from the lousy school district or the immigrant with poor English

  • will be fired before the suburban American teen from the excellent school district.

  • So those who are most disadvantaged,

  • tend to suffer the most job losses, this reality is compounded by the fact that

  • raising the minimum wage causes more competition for jobs.

  • A supermarket job that once paid $8 per hour draws more applicants when it pays

  • $15 per hour, applicants who include retirees, and people with higher education

  • who reenter the workforce only because of the higher wage.

  • Because these people often have more skills, they squeeze out immigrants and

  • those from disadvantaged backgrounds who are likely more desperate for the jobs,

  • and certainly more desperate to gain job experience.

  • The third reason is that minimum wage hikes aren't necessary to give

  • deserving workers raises.

  • 96% of American workers today earn wages higher than the current minimum wage,

  • which proves that employers don't just pay the minimum that they're obliged to

  • pay by law.

  • Employers respond to the value that each employee adds, so

  • they can retain the best talent.

  • It's expensive to train new employees and

  • businesses don't wanna lose good workers to their competitors, so

  • they raise worker pay voluntarily as employees gain more skills and experience.

  • But when government imposes such raises by hiking the minimum wage,

  • some of the least experienced workers will not only lose their current jobs,

  • they'll find it incredibly hard to find other jobs.

  • In essence, the minimum wage cuts off the first rung on the employment ladder.

  • And it's that first, lowest paying rung, that provides the skills and

  • experience workers need to reach the next rung, and

  • to continue climbing their way to a better life.

There's a movement in cities across the country to raise the minimum wage to $15

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