National Post

Minimum wage hike will hurt economy

- Howard Levitt Workplace Law

It is the law of unintended consequenc­es. Or is it? In this case, the consequenc­es will be both intended and unintended.

Kathleen Wynne passed a 32 per cent increase in the Ontario minimum wage over the next 18 months to $ 15, with 23 per cent of it in only six months. Of course, the full 32 per cent will only occur if the Wynne government remains in power. So the intended consequenc­e, l ike the other Hail Mary passes of t hat wounded government, such as rent control, negative shocks to the housing market and easier unionizati­on, is the purchase of votes in the next election, mostly from the NDP, which Liberal voters had been cratering toward. Insofar as 25 per cent of Ontario workers are potentiall­y affected, it is not a bad ploy. And it is not just workers earning less than $ 15 per hour who are affected. Other workers earning at or over that amount will require salary increases to stay above their lower- income coworkers.

Minimum wages are also scheduled to increase to $ 15 over four years in Alberta, a 47 per cent increase. B.C.’s potential NDP government has been openly musing about the same thing. I have had one union in B.C., where my client’s workers earn just over $ 15, demand higher increase son the basis that they cannot be seen to accept wages just over the minimum wage.

What about the unintended consequenc­es of this legislatio­n? I have already had clients advising me that this move will require them to shut their doors, their thin profits leading inexorably to losses as result of the higher wages costs and without the ability to pass on those costs in higher prices. Some clients have talked with me about relocating across the border before they go broke, taking advantage of the now lower wage costs there, a bonus being they would be closer to their customers.

Pas t minimum wage increases have disproport­ionately impacted teen unemployme­nt, thereby both depriving them of a stepping stone into work skills and marketabil­ity and ending their financial contributi­on to lower- income families.

And, of course, there is the impact on our EI and welfare systems.

What impact will this increase have on young workers trying to get their foot in the door, to obtain valuable experience, or older workers attempting to re- engage in the workplace?

When these unintended consequenc­es occur, as they inevitably will, it may have one other unintended consequenc­e — a backlash against the government­s by the very people whose votes they intended to garner. Financial Post Howard Levitt is senior partner of Levitt LLP, employment and labour lawyers. He practises employment law in eight provinces. Employment Law Hour with Howard Levitt airs Sunday sat 1 p.m. on Newstalk 1010 in Toronto. hlevitt@ levittllp. com Twitter. com/ HowardLevi­ttLaw

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