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re: Govt Assistance and Minimum Wage

Posted on 2/19/18 at 1:46 am to
Posted by beerJeep
Louisiana
Member since Nov 2016
35120 posts
Posted on 2/19/18 at 1:46 am to
Have you figured out how to read those graphs and tables in your link yet? Or are you still depending in the NYT author to tell you what they mean?

Seriously dude.... You are getting arse raped right now. Just log off and go to bed.
Posted by RogerTheShrubber
Juneau, AK
Member since Jan 2009
261685 posts
Posted on 2/19/18 at 1:47 am to
quote:

You are getting arse raped right now.


It's cringeworthy
Posted by Ebbandflow
Member since Aug 2010
13457 posts
Posted on 2/19/18 at 1:55 am to
"1Adjusted for inflation, the federal minimum wage peaked in 1968 at $8.68 (in 2016 dollars). Since it was last raised in 2009, to the current $7.25 per hour, the federal minimum has lost about 9.6% of its purchasing power to inflation. Back in 2015, The Economist estimated that, given how rich the U.S. is and the pattern among other advanced economies in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, “one would expect America … to pay a minimum wage around $12 an hour.”

2Less than half (45%) of the 2.6 million hourly workers who were at or below the federal minimum in 2015 were ages 16 to 24. An additional 23.3% are ages 25 to 34, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics; both shares have stayed more or less constant over the past decade. That 2.6 million represents less than 2% of all wage and salary workers. (See more about the demographics of minimum-wage workers.)"

Pew Research Center

Once the increases and decreases in income for all workers are taken into account, overall real income would rise by $1 billion.
Real income would increase, on net, by about $1 billion for families whose income will be below the poverty threshold under current law, boosting their average family income by about 1 percent and moving about 300,000 people, on net, above the poverty threshold.
Families whose income would have been between one and three times the poverty threshold would receive, on net, $3 billion in additional real income. About $1 billion, on net, would go to families whose income would have been between three and six times the poverty threshold.
Real income would decrease, on net, by $4 billion for families whose income would otherwise have been six times the poverty threshold or more, lowering their average family income by about 0.1 percent.
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