States That Raised Their Minimum Wages Are Experiencing Faster Job Growth

Dr Kynes

Well-Known Member
Think a higher minimum wage is a job killer? Think again: The states that raised their minimum wages on January 1 have seen higher employment growth since then than the states that kept theirs at the same rate.

The minimum wage went up in 13 states — Arizona, Connecticut, Colorado, Florida, Missouri, Montana, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, and Washington — either thanks to automatic increases in line with inflation or new legislation, as Ben Wolcott reports in his analysis at the Center for Economic and Policy Research. The average change in employment for those states over the first five months of the year as compared with the last five of 2013 is .99 percent, while the average for all remaining states is .68 percent.

Digging deeper, all but one of those states are experiencing increases in employment, and nine of them have seen growth above the median rate.



Wolcott’s analysis builds on a previous one from Goldman Sachs, which did the same evaluation for just January and compares it to December of last year. It found that the states that had minimum wage increases experienced faster job growth than those without a raise.

This doesn’t mean that increasing the minimum wage necessarily creates more jobs. “While this kind of simple exercise can’t establish causality, it does provide evidence against theoretical negative employment effects of minimum-wage increases,” Wolcott writes. Indeed, it adds to the evidence that higher minimum wages may not hurt job growth as much as some have warned. Washington has the highest minimum wage and saw the biggest increase in small business jobs last year. Its job growth has also remained steady and above average in the 15 years since it raised its wage. When economists studied state-level minimum wage increases over two decades they didn’t find any conclusive evidence that the raises impacted job creation.

That’s all good news for the ten states that have increased their minimum wages this year. Massachusetts went the furthest, raising its wage to $11 by 2017, but three — Hawaii, Maryland, and Connecticut — passed the $10.10 minimum wage being pushed at the federal level by Democrats and Vermont increased its wage to $10.50. And some cities have gone even further, with Seattle enacting a $15 minimum wage.

Progress in raising the entire country’s minimum wage has stalled, though. Republicans blocked a bill that would have increased it to $10.10 an hour.


http://thinkprogress.org/economy/2014/07/03/3456393/minimum-wage-state-increase-employment/


So what happened to raising the minimum wage would cost jobs?

you copy/paste a lot of blather and it doesnt mean a damned thing.

california has had "job growth" every fucking year, but unemployment keeps hovering around 8% (by the failed measure of what % of the populace actually gets an unemployment check)

the states that raised their minimum wage had LACKLUSTER "job growth" just l;ke the rest of the country, but obamanauts love to spin and parse everything to make Bwana OBama look good.

when the economy finally starts really improving the states with very high minimum wages (and very high costs of living) will get left behind, just like always.
 

Dr Kynes

Well-Known Member

Padawanbater2

Well-Known Member

UncleBuck

Well-Known Member
obamanauts love to spin and parse everything to make Bwana OBama look good.
i don't know how he has the gall to say stupid shit like this while boehner is trying to claim that cutting off UI is what has led to the recent job growth.

partisan hacks gonna hack partisanly.
 

DonAlejandroVega

Well-Known Member
you'd be celebrating that number if it went in YOUR direction.

but since it doesn't, you dismiss it.

poor deluded partisan. hope the hep C dispatches you early, one less racist around.
MY direction? LOL
I'm an anarchist; I won't cheer any of these pinatas, slave.

as far as your insults, I consider them as coming from a female, who has no other weapons. insults and temper tantrums....lol.
 

UncleBuck

Well-Known Member
look at the internet tough guy go.

maybe throw one of these in to make yourself e-tougher.



and some ellipses abuse...............for good measure.............
 

DonAlejandroVega

Well-Known Member
look at the internet tough guy go.

maybe throw one of these in to make yourself e-tougher.



and some ellipses abuse...............for good measure.............
I'm not getting tough with you. you are not a male in my eyes, so it would be wrong to get tough with you. I just have to try to be understanding with you. when I thought you were male, I offered to take you fishing; in your home state. you declined. I will treat you like the little girl you are. :)
 

sheskunk

Well-Known Member
I'm not getting tough with you. you are not a male in my eyes, so it would be wrong to get tough with you. I just have to try to be understanding with you. when I thought you were male, I offered to take you fishing; in your home state. you declined. I will treat you like the little girl you are. :)
l would love to go fishing with you. You have to bait my hook for me though.
 

NoDrama

Well-Known Member
"The average change in employment for those states over the first five months of the year as compared with the last five of 2013 is .99 percent, while the average for all remaining states is .68 percent."
Average change in employment means a loss of jobs OR a gain in jobs.

If California were to lose 10% of its employees to lay offs, you could honestly say that California's rate of change in employment was 10%.

Would that be a good thing or a bad thing?

Sorry, only 2 states have positive job growth, the rest just have somewhat less job loss than before, but somehow losing jobs has now become something good we can claim?

Laugh Out Loud.

You should rename the thread title to : States which increased the minimum wage are all still losing jobs, just not quite at the extreme rate they were when this whole thing started.
 

Dr Kynes

Well-Known Member
"The average change in employment for those states over the first five months of the year as compared with the last five of 2013 is .99 percent, while the average for all remaining states is .68 percent."

thats some might tight finestoning you got there.

seattle raised it's min wage to 15$ /hhour, and yet, they are still losing jobs hand over fist.
 

Red1966

Well-Known Member
"The average change in employment for those states over the first five months of the year as compared with the last five of 2013 is .99 percent, while the average for all remaining states is .68 percent."
Note your failure to comprehend "The average change in employment" doesn't indicate whether that change was positive or negative. You have no reason to presume it was positive. The fact you do and keep posting it as if it proves your point just shows how you believe what you want to believe and distort reality to fit your preconceived notions.
 
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