Higher Minimum Wages
by
Walter E. Williams
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by Walter E. Williams: Cultural
Deviancy, Not Guns
In his State
of the Union address, President Barack Obama proposed raising the
minimum wage from $7.25 an hour to $9 an hour. That would be almost
a 25 percent increase. Let's look at the president's proposal, but
before doing so, let's ask some other economic questions.
Are people
responsive to changes in price? For example, if the price of cars
rose by 25 percent, would people purchase as many cars? Supposing
housing prices rose by 25 percent, what would happen to sales? Those
are big-ticket items, but what about smaller-priced items? If a
supermarket raised its prices by 25 percent, would people purchase
as much? It's not rocket science to conclude that when prices rise,
people adjust their behavior by purchasing less.
It's almost
childish to do so, but I'm going to ask questions about 25 percent
price changes in the other way. What responses would people have
if the price of cars or housing fell by 25 percent? What would happen
to supermarket sales if prices fell by 25 percent? Again, it doesn't
require deep thinking to guess that people would purchase more.
This behavior
in economics is known as the first fundamental law of demand. It
holds that the higher the price of something the less people will
take and that the lower the price the more people will take. There
are no known exceptions to the law of demand. Any economist who
could prove a real-world exception would probably be a candidate
for the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences and other honors.
Dr. Alan Krueger,
an economist, is chairman of the president's Council of Economic
Advisers. I wonder whether he advised the president that though
people surely would be responsive to 25 percent increases in the
prices of other goods and services, they would not be responsive
to a 25 percent wage increase. I'd bet the rent money that you couldn't
get Krueger to answer the following statement by saying either true
or false: A 25 percent increase in the price of labor would not
affect employment. If anything, his evasive response would be that
found in a White House memo, reported in The Wall Street Journal's
article titled "The Minority Youth Unemployment Act" (Feb. 15),
namely that "a range of economic studies show that modestly raising
the minimum wage increases earnings and reduces poverty without
measurably reducing employment." The WSJ article questions that
statement: "Note the shifty adverbs, 'modestly' and 'measurably,'
which can paper over a lot of economic damage." My interpretation
of the phrase "without measurably reducing employment" is that only
youngsters, mostly black youngsters, would be affected by an increase.
University
of California, Irvine economist David Neumark has examined more
than 100 major academic studies on the minimum wage. He states that
the White House claim "grossly misstates the weight of the evidence."
About 85 percent of the studies "find a negative employment effect
on low-skilled workers." A 1976 American Economic Association survey
found that 90 percent of its members agreed that increasing the
minimum wage raises unemployment among young and unskilled workers.
A 1990 survey found that 80 percent of economists agreed with the
statement that increases in the minimum wage cause unemployment
among the youth and low-skilled. If you're looking for a consensus
in most fields of study, examine the introductory and intermediate
college textbooks in the field. Economics textbooks that mention
the minimum wage say that it increases unemployment for the least
skilled worker.
As detailed
in my recent book Race
and Economics (2012), during times of gross racial discrimination,
black unemployment was lower than white unemployment and blacks
were more active in the labor market. For example, in 1948, black
teen unemployment was less than white teen unemployment, and black
teens were more active in the labor market. Today black teen unemployment
is about 40 percent; for whites, it is about 20 percent. The minimum
wage law weighs heavily in this devastating picture. Supporters
of higher minimum wages want to index it to inflation so as to avoid
its periodic examination.
February
27, 2013
Walter
E. Williams is the John M. Olin distinguished professor of economics
at George Mason University, and a nationally syndicated columnist.
To find out more about Walter E. Williams and read features by other
Creators Syndicate columnists and cartoonists, visit the Creators
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© 2013 Creators Syndicate, Inc.
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