Analysis, Commentary

Minimum-wage Workers will Lose Almost $2,370 in Purchasing Power This Year


Minimum wage workers
A cashier checks out a customer in Lakewood, Colorado, August 11, 2017. (Source: Center for American Progress)

Washington, D.C. —(ENEWSPF)—March 1, 2018

By: Rachel West

Today is Minimum Wage Workers’ Equal Pay Day, the day that marks how many additional days into the new year a minimum-wage worker must work to earn the same amount she did in 2009, when the federal minimum wage was last increased. The answer, according to a new analysis from the Center of American Progress, is that a full-time worker earning $7.25 per hour in 2018 would need to work an extra 41 days—more than eight additional working weeks—just to take home the same pay as in 2009.

But while inflation has eroded workers’ pay, the number of working days in the year has not magically grown. So this year, a full-time minimum-wage worker will lose almost $2,370 in purchasing power—more than 47 times the average tax cut the same worker can expect to temporarily receive from the congressional Republican tax law.

“Even while rising rents have pushed up the cost of living across the country, the federal minimum wage has stayed flat for nearly a decade, forcing people to work longer hours and take on extra jobs just to keep up,” said Rep. Keith Ellison (D-MN), Vice Chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and sponsor of the Pay Workers a Living Wage Act. “At a time when CEOs are taking home record bonuses, that is an unconscionable failure of our government. It is past time for those in Congress to stop listening to corporate donors, and start listening to movements like the Fight for $15 by establishing a nationwide living wage to make a real difference in the lives of working people.”

As the minimum wage has lost value, more and more minimum-wage workers now need to turn to programs like Medicaid and nutrition assistance to make ends meet. But instead of raising the poverty-level minimum wage, President Donald Trump and his colleagues in Congress are kicking workers while they’re down, pursuing draconian cuts to these and other vital programs that help families afford the basics when wages aren’t enough.

“President Trump and his congressional allies have bent over backwards to deliver massive tax giveaways to the wealthiest—yet congressional Republicans have refused to lift a finger in nearly nine years to raise the pay of America’s lowest-paid workers,” said Rachel West, director of poverty research at the Center for American Progress. “If Trump and congressional Republicans were sincere about their repeated promises to help working families, they wouldn’t be proposing massive cuts to programs like Medicaid and nutrition assistance. Instead, they’d be championing a higher minimum wage to ensure that wages are enough to make ends meet.”

The burden of federal inaction on the minimum wage falls disproportionately on women and workers of color, threatening to exacerbate America’s deep gender and racial pay gaps. And for every year that Congress fails to raise the nation’s minimum wage above the poverty wage of $7.25 per hour, inflation will continue to erode low-wage workers’ pay, pushing Minimum Wage Workers’ Equal Pay Day later into the new year.

To read the analysis, click here.

Source: www.americanprogress.org


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