Houston Chronicle

Report: $15 minimum pay would boost 27M workers

- By Lisa Mascaro

WASHINGTON — Gradually raising the federal minimum wage to $15 an hour would boost pay for as many as 27 million workers, but it could also cost as many as 1.3 million jobs by 2025, according to a report released Monday from the nonpartisa­n Congressio­nal Budget Office.

That’s the trade-off facing House Democrats as they prepare to vote on legislatio­n to raise the wage, a top issue for lawmakers and the party’s 2020 presidenti­al candidates confrontin­g an era of stagnant pay and gaping income inequality.

The Democratic chairman of the Education and Labor Committee, Rep. Bobby Scott of Virginia, said there’s no question the report makes the case for increasing the wage, which would be the first in a decade.

“The benefits vastly outweigh any costs,” Scott said Monday on a call with reporters. “Anybody who reads the whole report will be impressed by 27 million people having significan­t benefits.”

The budget office found that some 17 million workers now earning less than $15 would see their wages boosted, and another 10 million already at that pay level could also benefit. The result would also bring some 1.3 million workers, half of them under 18, out of poverty, it said.

At the same time, boosting the federal minimum could result in job losses. That has long been the argument against wage hikes, particular­ly from Republican­s in Congress and their allies in the business community.

The budget office’s report acknowledg­es “considerab­le uncertaint­y” around this issue. It expects 1.3 million workers would lose their jobs, but also says there’s a chance there could be as many as 3.7 million — or the outcome could be no job losses at all.

Douglas Holtz-Eakin, a conservati­ve-leaning former director of the budget office, said on Twitter, “results not shocking — lose 1.3m jobs (median).” He said those advocating for legislatio­n to raise the wage are “really missing the point about helping genuinely poor.”

Now at $7.25 an hour, the federal minimum has not been raised since 2009, when Democrats last controlled the House, though 29 states and several cities have set their minimum wage above that level.

House Democrats have struggled to coalesce around a bill this year that would satisfy the liberal flank that largely supports the $15 hourly wage and lawmakers from more conservati­ve, rural and lowerincom­e areas who worry about the economic fallout.

Alabama Democratic Rep. Terri Sewell had offered an alternativ­e proposal that would allow the minimum wage to be set regionally, but the effort found only modest backing.

House leaders have told lawmakers to expect to vote next week on the bill from Scott’s committee that gradually lifts the wage, over five years, to the $15 threshold.

The budget office analyzed other options — raising the wage to $12 or $10 an hour — but Scott panned those efforts. Even though job losses would be less, so would the benefits to workers, the report said.

Scott said there’s less risk, but “virtually no reward.”

 ?? Ruth Fremson / New York Times ?? The report said 17 million workers now earning less than $15 would see their wages boosted, and another 10 million already at that pay level could also benefit.
Ruth Fremson / New York Times The report said 17 million workers now earning less than $15 would see their wages boosted, and another 10 million already at that pay level could also benefit.

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