Tuesday, September 25, 2018 The New York Times Explains Why the Minimum Wage Should Be $0.00
No matter how many jobs the minimum wage destroys, no matter how many times you debunk it, it always comes back to wreak more havoc. Economic Literacy from an Unexpected SourceWe've covered the issues at length at FEE, and quite effectively, if I do say so myself. But I have to admit that one of the greatest takedowns of the minimum wage you'll ever find comes from an unlikely place: The New York Times. There are many reasons people and politicians find the minimum wage attractive, of course. But the Times, in an editorial entitled “The Right Minimum Wage: $0.00,” skillfully rebuts each of these reasons in turn. Noting that the federal minimum wage has been frozen for some six years, the Times admits that it's no wonder that organized labor is pressuring politicians to increase the federal minimum wage to raise the standard of living for poorer working Americans. “No wonder. But still a mistake,” the Times explains. “There's a virtual consensus among economists that the minimum wage is an idea whose time has passed.” But why has the idea “passed”? Why would raising the minimum wage not help the working poor? “Raising the minimum wage by a substantial amount would price working poor people out of the job market,” the editors explain. But wouldn't the minimum wage increase the purchasing power of low-income Americans? Wouldn't a meaningful increase allow a single breadwinner to support a family of three and actually be above the official U.S. poverty line? Ideally, yes. But there are unseen problems, as the editors point out:
But if that's true, why would progressives support such a law? What's their rationale for supporting a minimum wage if it does more harm than good? Is it sheer political opportunism? Not necessarily. The Times explains:
There's just one problem with this logic, the editors say:
Times Have ChangedIt's a compelling, reasoned, and erudite argument. But it's not exactly what one expects to see in The New York Times these days. (A naughty person might say the same about reason and erudition in general in the paper.) So what gives? Alas, the editorial is a relic. It was written way, way back in 1987. A lot has changed since then. We've had a couple wars. The internet was introduced to the masses. There was 9-11. We elected the nation's first black president. The Cubs and Red Sox won the World Series. There was even a female reboot of Ghostbusters. At least one thing, however, did not change. That would be the laws of economics. They hold as fast and true in 2018 as they did in 1987. The Times' editorial board might have changed. The perception of the minimum wage certainly changed. Relatively recent polls show seven out of ten Americans support raising the federal minimum wage. Several cities—Seattle, New York, and Minneapolis, among them—have passed laws that raised (or will soon raise) the minimum wage to $15 an hour. Still, economic laws do not change based on how popular humans find them. They remain true and constant whether they are popular or not. So it's safe to say the minimum wage laws have become more popular, no doubt in part from campaigns promoting them and an education system sympathetic to them. Still, economic laws do not change based on how popular humans find them. They remain true and constant whether they are popular or not. In fact, some have observed that economic laws are inherently unpopular. “In economics, the majority is always wrong,” John Kenneth Galbraith once allegedly quipped. Now, there have been a lot of complaints directed at corporate media in recent years, but I believe in giving credit where credit is due. So let's give the Times a hand. The paper was right in 1987. And if politicians are genuinely interested in helping the poor, they'll stick a stake in the heart of the minimum wage once and for all. Jonathan Miltimore is the Managing Editor of FEE.org. His writing/reporting has been the subject of articles in TIME magazine, The Wall Street Journal, CNN, Forbes, Fox News, and the Star Tribune. Back To Leeconomics.com |