Increasing the federal minimum wage to $15 an hour would lift 7.6 million people in the United States out of poverty.
The Issue
Advocates for raising the federal minimum wage note that someone working full-time at the current federal minimum wage does not earn enough to keep a family out of poverty. Critics of a higher minimum wage argue that raising it would end up taking jobs away from the very workers it is meant to help because employers could not afford the higher labor costs.
Key Findings
- The annual family earnings of the nearly 56 million affected workers nationwide would rise by an average of $5,600 as a result of the minimum wage increase.
- Assuming no job loss would occur as a result of raising the minimum wage, nearly one-third of U.S. workers would be affected by an increase in the federal minimum wage to $15.
- Hispanic workers would see the largest increases in earnings and reductions in poverty. Earnings of affected Hispanic workers could rise by $5,900 and net family resources would increase by almost $4,500. °2.5 million Hispanic people in the United States would be lifted out of poverty.
- Even assuming some job loss, 6.9 million people would be lifted out of poverty, including 1.2 million Black people. °States that would see the largest reductions in poverty are Louisiana (3.2 percentage point reduction), Texas (3.0 percentage point reduction), and Florida and Mississippi (2.8 percentage point reduction).
Conclusion
Researchers determine that regardless of the scenarios, a federal minimum wage increase would reduce poverty among all race and ethnic groups. Considering this wage increase would likely impact 56 million workers, it has the potential to bring great financial relief to families who need it most.
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