Tehachapi News

State’s minimum hourly wage rising to $15.50

- BY JOHN DONEGAN

The next time you walk into McDonald’s, don’t be surprised if the dollar menu becomes the $1.25 menu.

California will increase its minimum wage to $15.50 effective Jan. 1, the state’s Department of Industrial Relations said in a Dec. 14 news release.

In response to the state’s New Year’s resolution, many businesses are bracing for possible changes. This is the seventh wage increase since 2016, when state lawmakers passed a law phasing in a $15-an-hour wage by 2022 or 2023, depending on the size of the business.

It is also the smallest increase — 3.33 percent— since 2018. “Bigger employers are not going to get hurt that much,” said Richard Gearhardt, an economics professor at Cal State Bakersfiel­d. “In an inflationa­ry environmen­t, they are likely to pass some, if not all, of this on to consumers. For smaller businesses, however, they don’t have the same latitude to pass this on to consumers (in part because they are competing against bigbox retailers who have sufficient economies of scale).”

The state’s minimum wage is now more than double the federal minimum of $7.25 an hour, and one of the highest in the country.

While larger businesses — those with 26 employees or more — will see a 50-cent increase, smaller businesses will now have to cover a $1.50-per-hour pay jump.

“I think the wage increase is going to affect the continued cost of goods going up,” said Alejandro Ocampo, owner of several restaurant­s in town, including Camino Real Kitchen & Tequila and Bakersfiel­d Pizza Co. & Bar. “Unfortunat­ely, what the customers don’t understand is that we’re not just raising prices to make money, but to stay in business.”

Ocampo said that despite misconcept­ions that owners make “fistfuls of cash,” he has had to close on Mondays at his three restaurant­s. In April, he shortened his menus a second time to offset food and labor costs.

Despite the state’s good intentions, some small-time employers fear this will only translate to less employment, a higher cost of living and businesses closing shop.

“The moment it goes up, the cost of goods goes up,” Ocampo said. “Ever since the minimum wage went up, food and housing costs went up. At what point is ‘minimum’ enough?”

Gearhart anticipate­s small businesses will hire less and make less money as a result. He said the hardest hit will be fast food, retail, entertainm­ent and transporta­tion, where minimum wage work constitute­s the largest share of labor.

“The first three are going to be the biggest in Bakersfiel­d,” Gearhart said. “Especially if we hit a recessiona­ry environmen­t; if that’s the case, small businesses are going to be disproport­ionately hurt (they already are with inflation and exiting COVID).”

Some experts have referred to this as an inflationa­ry increase, which means higher wages translate to higher prices, a sort of shifting the problem onto the consumer.

“In basic economic theory, yes, this has the potential to be ‘inflationa­ry,’” Gearhart said. “In practice, however, the inflation impact from minimum wage increases (which are a small fraction of the whole labor force) will be small.”

Ocampo made the point he has paid his employees at least a dollar more than the minimum wage for the past three years.

“I get what they’re trying to do with minimum wage, but my concern is what about people that went to school and have businesses — do their wages go up?” Ocampo asked. “Why am I going to school to make $20 an hour when I can flip burgers and make $21?”

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