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  • "The Right Minimum Wage: $0.00."

  • That was the headline of an editorial in one of America's most prestigious newspapers.

  • Can you guess which one? The Wall Street Journal, perhaps?

  • Right city; wrong paper. This editorial appeared in the New York Times in 1987.

  • "There's a virtual consensus among economists," the Times wrote,

  • "that the minimum wage is an idea whose time has passed."

  • So, economists and the liberal paper were on the same page (pun intended).

  • Why?

  • Because they understood that a minimum wage does not guarantee jobs. It guarantees only

  • that those who get jobs will be paid at least that minimum. And that leads to two bad outcomes:

  • unemployment and higher prices. I can best explain this by asking a simple question:

  • What is a wage? A wage is the price of labor. Now, what happens if the price of

  • labor rises, not because workers have become more productive, not because a business must

  • pay higher wages to hold on to valuable employees, but only because the government requires it?

  • When the minimum wage rises, employers will adjust. They will use less labor.

  • They'll fire current employees or cut back on their hours.

  • They will also raise prices for their goods or services. These are undesirable consequences.

  • But let's also consider another bad effect

  • Businesses will hire fewer workers, especially those with little or no job experience.

  • Suppose you're young and haven't worked many jobs before. Maybe you've never had a job

  • and are trying to land your first one.

  • The work you can offer an employer may be worth only, say, $7 an hour.

  • You agree. He agrees. And you have your first job.

  • But what if the minimum wage set by the government is higher than $7? What if it's $10 or more?

  • Well, you won't get the job. You may be willing to work for $7 an hour,

  • but under minimum wage laws, it would be illegal for you to do so.

  • This very point was made by Paul Samuelson, one of the leading economists of the twentieth century,

  • and a prominent liberal. I paraphrase from his classic textbook Economics:

  • "What good does it do a black youth to know that an employer must pay him a minimum wage

  • if the fact that he must be paid that wage keeps him from getting a job?"

  • And, that young person loses more than a paycheck. He also loses valuable work experience:

  • learning to accept responsibility, dealing with a boss, getting along with co-workers -- all the things

  • that demonstrate to an employer that he made the right choice in hiring; and all the things

  • that will help that young person get a better paying job down the road.

  • A recent study found that in some cities the unemployment rate for teens without a high

  • school diploma approached 50%.

  • Pricing these teens out of the labor market does them no favors.

  • It's not doing the rest of society any favors, either. Teenagers who can't find jobs

  • often find trouble. Advocates of a higher minimum wage argue that,

  • while some young people might be priced out of the job market, this is outweighed by the

  • fact that those who have minimum wage jobs will get a wage increase.

  • But that doesn't mean they'd be better off. It's true that the government can force business

  • owners to pay its minimum wage workers more per hour, but it can't force these business

  • owners to pay them more per week. According to the Los Angeles Times, after Connecticut

  • raised its minimum wage to $10.10 an hour, a 20 year old woman who worked at a donut

  • shop in Hartford was soon disappointed when her hours were cut from 35 per week to 27.

  • Employers will look for other ways to cut costs. The Economic Policy Institute, a union-funded

  • organization that pushes for higher minimum wages, admits this. "Employers," they write

  • on their website, "may be able to absorb some of the costs of a wage increase through higher

  • productivity, lower recruiting and training costs, decreased absenteeism, and increased

  • worker morale." How would an employer get higher productivity? By working the employees harder.

  • How would an employer cut training costs? By training them less.

  • So, let's summarize. Raising the minimum wage makes it harder for young and inexperienced

  • workers to get jobs, to get on that crucial first rung of the employment ladder.

  • And many of those who do benefit from a wage increase will likely find those benefits undone.

  • They will work fewer hours, will work harder per hour, and will get less training.

  • Sounds like the New York Times had it right back in 1987.

  • I'm David Henderson, the editor of The Concise Encyclopedia of Economics, for Prager University.

"The Right Minimum Wage: $0.00."

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正しい最低賃金とは? (What's the Right Minimum Wage?)

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