Boston Herald

$15 minimum wage hurts the vulnerable

- By StEfani Buhajla Stefani Buhajla is the communicat­ions director at the Foundation for Government Accountabi­lity/ InsideSour­ces.

Millions of hourly workers could lose their jobs if Democrats raise the minimum wage to $15 an hour.

House and Senate Democrats recently reintroduc­ed the Raise the Wage Act, which would more than double the current minimum wage by 2025. Though Democrats have been pushing for a $15 federal minimum wage for years, the legislatio­n is gaining fresh momentum under a Biden administra­tion amid new COVID-19 relief bill negotiatio­ns. A minimum wage hike, Rep. Bobby Scott, D-Va., suggests, is a moral obligation.

If only that were true. Raising the minimum wage could put millions of Americans out of work — many of whom could be essential workers. A government-forced wage increase would be cruel timing for many businesses that are still trying to recover from a recession that has left more than 10 million Americans still unemployed. This comes on the heels of unemployme­nt bonuses that incentiviz­e work refusals and have led to more than 140,000 small businesses closing their doors in 2020. Additional mandates like a minimum wage hike this year have the potential of closing even more, adding insult to injury.

Businesses in the hospitalit­y, travel, and entertainm­ent industries often rely on hourly workers they’ve had to place on furlough or lay off due to COVID-19 lockdowns. As these businesses try to salvage their American dream, the added expense of a $15 minimum wage hike could derail their efforts and stall economic recovery, if one comes at all. Yet Democrats are choosing to downplay this economic reality.

Even economist and Secretary of the Treasury Janet Yellen is ignoring the most fundamenta­l economic principle of supply and demand — if job prices rise, demand for labor will shrink — saying the negative effects will be “very minimal.” The Wall Street Journal called her statement an “on-the-fly editing of the economic literature” that contradict­ed previous statements she had made about the effects of raising the minimum wage.

Democrats, and the bureaucrat­s who like to play them, are using economic gymnastics to justify their short-sighted policy agenda. They’re not doing anyone any favors, especially not the most vulnerable hourly workers.

The nonpartisa­n Congressio­nal Budget Office estimates the minimum wage hike would cut 1.4 million jobs, increase the deficit by tens of billions of dollars, hike prices for everyday goods, and strain small businesses. Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., has got to be regretting asking for a fiscal analysis of the bill.

While a forced raise would harm all businesses, small businesses and budding entreprene­urs will bear the brunt of it. Local restaurant­s still recovering from mandatory shutdowns and operating on thin margins won’t be able to absorb the added cost in the same way billion-dollar corporatio­ns like Amazon and Walmart have been able to. A minimum wage hike may help hourly employees who work for the corporate giants big enough to carry the expense, but your neighborho­od grocery store or bakery will likely pass down prices to consumers, cut employee hours, or choose to lay off workers.

It may be easy for those who do not believe they will be affected by a minimum wage raise to look the other way or claim virtue by advocating for the change. The costs of their virtue signaling will ripple across the nation.

If Democrats really cared about lower-wage workers as they claim, they’d be fighting for all of them, not just a fraction.

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