[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 107 (Wednesday, July 24, 2013)]
[Senate]
[Pages S5899-S5900]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE MINIMUM WAGE
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, 4 years ago today, the Federal minimum
wage increased to $7.25 per hour. That was the final phase of a minimum
wage increase that Congress passed in 2007. After 4 years, it is time
to evaluate where wages stand.
Since 1967, the Federal minimum wage has increased from $1.40 to
$7.25. While at first glance this seems like significant progress, when
adjusted to current dollars the value of the minimum wage has actually
declined by 12.1 percent. Had the minimum wage kept pace with
inflation, it would be $10.74 an hour today.
But the minimum wage for tipped workers is even worse. The current
minimum wage for tipped workers is $2.13, and that has not gone up
since 1991. Employers paying the tipped minimum wage now pay just 21
percent of what that employee would make at minimum wage. This forces
workers to use more and more of their tips simply to make up the
difference between the tipped minimum wage and the standard minimum
wage.
Working 40 hours per week at $7.25 per hour translates to just
$15,080 per year. That's about $400 less than the Federal poverty level
guidelines for a family of two. Last week, The Atlantic ran an article
that showed a budget chart produced by McDonald's to help its employees
better manage their finances. And while I commend McDonald's for trying
to help workers better manage money, the budget tells a sad story.
According to the chart, someone making the minimum wage and working
40 hours a week at McDonald's would have to work a second job to make
ends meet. But to be clear for this budget to be accurate, a worker
must hold nearly two full time jobs. According to the Washington Post's
Wonkblog, a worker making the minimum wage would to have work 75 hours
a week to have the after-tax income in the McDonalds sample budget.
Working 75 hours a week at minimum wage with no vacation days and
limited benefits--if any--one can make $24,720 a year, after tax.
How does a person do that if they are a single parent? They can't.
There are not enough hours in the day to raise a family working that
many hours. And there certainly aren't enough dollars in the income to
provide child care.
The sample budget drawn up for McDonald's employees might as well
include a line for Federal and State assistance. Families living on the
minimum wage have few alternatives but to turn to programs such as
SNAP, housings assistance, and Medicaid to survive. These are the same
programs that are regularly attacked by the ultra-conservative for
growing too quickly. For those who insist that working be a requirement
for receiving public assistance, shouldn't they also insist that if you
are working full time you shouldn't need public assistance? Wouldn't
that be a good definition of a minimum wage?
If we increase the minimum wage to $10.10, more than 30 million
workers would receive a raise. And while some of these workers are
teenagers, 88 percent are adults. For many of those adults, these are
not part time jobs or stepping stones to their next job, but the full
time job they rely on for a living.
That is why 4 years after the last minimum wage increase, it is time
to act again. I am a cosponsor of the Fair Minimum Wage Act introduced
by Senator Harkin in the Senate and Representative George Miller in the
House. The Fair Minimum Wage Act will increase the minimum wage from
$7.25 to $10.10 per hour in three, 95-cent annual increments, and index
it to inflation annually thereafter. The bill will also gradually raise
the minimum wage for tipped workers from the current $2.13 per hour to
a level that is 70% of the regular minimum wage.
If we pass the Fair Minimum Wage Act that same full-time worker being
paid minimum wage I mentioned earlier that makes $15,080 a year--will
make $21,000. That can be the difference for a family that is getting
by and one that is living in poverty. I hope my colleagues on both
sides of the aisle will join me in cosponsoring the Fair Minimum Wage
Act.
Mr. HARKIN. Mr. President, 4 years ago today, July 24, 2009, was the
last time the minimum wage was increased. It rose from $6.55 an hour to
$7.25 an hour. And it has been stuck there ever since. Four years is
too long. It is time to raise the minimum wage.
To that end, I have introduced legislation along with Rep. George
Miller in the House. The Fair Minimum Wage Act will gradually increase
the minimum wage to $10.10 an hour in three annual steps. Our bill will
also link future increases in the minimum wage to the cost of living,
using the Consumer Price Index, so that people who are trying to get
ahead don't fall behind as our economy grows. Finally, our bill--for
the first time in more than 20 years--will raise the minimum wage for
workers who earn tips, from a paltry $2.13 per hour, today, to a level
that is 70 percent of the regular minimum wage. This will be gradually
phased in over the course of 6 years, which will give businesses time
to adjust while providing more fairness for hardworking people in
tipped industries.
While millions of workers have been without a raise these past 4
years, costs have continued to climb. Between 2009 and 2012, rent has
gone up 4%, auto repair costs have climbed 6%, food is 8% more
expensive, child care costs 9% more, and public transportation takes a
13% bigger bite out of workers' wallets.
I do not need to tell you that when you are taking in $1,000 a month,
even a few dollars more at the grocery checkout line is a hardship. The
tens of millions of working poor and low-wage Americans and their
families know this. They know that the minimum wage, for many, is a
poverty wage; it pays $3,000 less per year than what is needed to lift
a family of three above
[[Page S5900]]
the poverty line. They know they can not survive on such meager wages.
They know it because they live it.
Unfortunately, the McDonald's corporation does not seem to
understand. Last week, a budgeting brochure that McDonald's provides
its workers went viral on the Internet. It seems that, as the folks at
The Atlantic said, ``McDonald's can't figure out how its workers
survive on minimum wage.'' Let's talk about McDonald's.
McDonald's is the third-largest employer of low-wage workers in the
country, with 860,000 U.S. workers. According to Glassdoor, the average
wage for a cashier is $7.72 and for a crew member is $7.68. That is
just pennies above the minimum. Even managers only make around $9.50
per hour, sometimes less.
The McDonald's budget brochure shows workers how to add up their
monthly expenses to determine their monthly household budget. But wages
at McDonald's are so paltry that its sample budget had to assume that
its employees work two full-time jobs to earn $2,000 a month. Never
mind that most fast food jobs are part-time, and finding two jobs would
be very difficult in today's economy with so many unemployed and part-
time workers looking for full-time jobs.
On top of requiring two jobs, this budget's estimated costs are
either out of sync with reality or simply missing. It estimated rent at
$600 a month, when in reality rent costs $783 for a one-bedroom
apartment and $977 for a two-bedroom, according to the National Low-
Income Housing Coalition. Those are national figures; rent is much
higher in many parts of the country. The McDonald's budget also doesn't
include necessities like child care or food. And I don't know where
someone is going to get health insurance for $20 a month. Even
McDonald's charges $54 a month for its most basic plan for one employee
with no dependents, and that is after a year of working there. With
just one dependent, it is $140 a month. And that basic plan still has
deductibles and copays on top of the premium.
This just shows how difficult it is for tens of millions of people--
folks who do some of the most demanding work in our country--to make
ends meet. But it's not just low-wage workers who are hurt when they
can't keep up with costs. This hurts our communities and our local
businesses as well. When our neighbors can't afford to go to the
grocery store or the auto repair shop or the hardware store, all of
those businesses suffer. They lose customers and sales.
But imagine if the lowest wage workers all got raises. They would
take their car in for that long-needed repair. They would pick up a few
extra items at the store. They would buy a new pair of shoes for their
growing son or daughter. And those local stores would all benefit.
And when we see that 30 million people across the country will get a
raise thanks to the Fair Minimum Wage Act, all that extra spending
really adds up. The local grocery might even have to hire new people to
keep up with rising demand. In total, my bill will add $33 billion to
our GDP over its 3 years of implementation. And it will create 140,000
new jobs over that same period.
It's simple: more money in consumers' pockets means more spending,
which means more economic activity, which means more jobs.
In fact, the financial and economic experts know this already. I have
seen article after article, interview after interview from financial
experts saying that we need more consumer spending in order to get our
economy really going. Just last month, the Wall Street Journal
interviewed the president of Naroff Economic Advisors. He analyzed a
recent consumer spending report and said, ``We're in a situation where
we need much stronger increases in wages and salaries if households are
going to have the money to spend and the economy's going to grow
faster.'' He added:
We need wages to grow significantly faster. They're coming
up from where they have been, but we need them to really
begin to pick up. We need stronger job growth, but more
importantly we also need average salaries and hourly wages to
grow faster. Those have been largely flat and that's the
problem. Right now, income's growing because we're creating
more jobs, not because people are making more money. We need
the average person to see their salaries go up before they
can spend more and drive this economy forward.
Well, we can raise wages in this country, and we can provide those
raises to the people who need it most--not to CEOs but to the people
serving our food, watching our children, helping us when we call
customer service, and assisting us at our local stores. These are the
people who are earning wages so low, they work two jobs and still can't
make ends meet. And these are people who will go out and spend just
about every dime in their local stores, boosting their local economies.
Minimum wage workers want to support themselves. Ninety percent of
the people who would benefit from my legislation are adults, not
teenagers. They are often parents. In fact, one in five working parents
in this country will get a raise under my bill, and a third of single
parents. A total of 18 million children have parents who would get a
raise. Think about that. All of those millions of families with a
little more money to spend. What a help that will be to those growing
kids.
We owe it to millions of low-wage families struggling to just have a
glimpse of the American Dream, to make sure that they get a raise and
can support their families. But we also owe it to ourselves, to our
economy. Our system works best when everyone has the opportunity to
support themselves, to be productive, and to participate in our larger
economy.
Raising the minimum wage is a simple and effective way to do this.
And we know we can do it in a responsible way, with no unintended
consequences. My bill would phase in an increase in three steps, giving
businesses time to adapt. And because the minimum wage will apply to
all businesses, no single business will be at a competitive
disadvantage.
Also, my proposal is in line percentage wise with previous increases
in the minimum wage. Decades of solid economic research shows us that
these increases have not caused job losses. In fact, businesses stand
to benefit from increased wages, because raises result in significantly
lower turnover rates, which in turn saves those businesses money.
Four years without a raise is 3 years too many. We have to make sure
that working families can keep up with the economy. That is why linking
future increases in the minimum wage to the cost of living is so
crucial. Small annual increases will be easy to absorb, but will make a
big difference to American families. And it will help our businesses on
Main Street as well as our national economy.
Mr. President, it is time to raise the minimum wage and link it to
inflation for the future. It is the right thing to do, and it is the
responsible thing to do. And it will give a much needed boost to both
local economies and our national economy. I urge my colleagues to
support this long-overdue legislation.
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