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  • Does the Minimum Wage Hurt Workers? Some politicians argue that raising the minimum

  • wage helps the poor and disadvantaged. It might seem that way at first. Certainly workers

  • who are earning $8 an hour today would be better off if they were earning $12 an hour

  • instead. The problem is that this view of the minimum wage overlooks one important detail:

  • A $12 minimum wage doesn't force employers to pay $12 to every worker; it forces them

  • to pay $12 to the workers the employer chooses to keep. The employer pays $0 to the workers

  • that get laid off or who are never hired in the first place.

  • Let's look at an example. Suppose this guy owns a burger joint. The reason the owner

  • hirers a worker is because the worker generates value for the owner. Suppose that, not counting

  • what he pays his worker, the owner makes 10 cents on every burger he sells.

  • Here's Al. Al can flip 100 burgers an hour. If the owner makes 10 cents on every burger,

  • not counting what he pays Al, then Al generates $10 worth of burgers for the owner every hour.

  • If the owner pays Al $8 an hour, then the owner makes $2 an hour profit: $10 an hour

  • on the burgers, minus $8 an hour that he pays Al.

  • Now suppose that the employer hires three workers of varying abilities: Al, Bob, and

  • Carl. Bob is a faster worker and can cook 120 burgers an hour. Carl is a slower worker

  • and can only cook 90 burgers an hour. Since each burger is worth 10 cents to the owner,

  • each hour Al produces $10 worth of burgers, Bob produces $12, and Carl produces $9.

  • Suppose the owner pays Al, Bob, and Carl $8 an hour each. After paying the workers, the

  • owner earns $2 an hour profit from employing Al, $4 an hour profit from employing Bob,

  • and $1 an hour profit from employing Carl. In total, the owner makes $7 profit per hour

  • from employing the three workers. Now suppose the government imposes a minimum

  • wage of $9.50 an hour. What does this do to the profit of our three workers? Al produces

  • $10 worth of burgers per hour. At a cost of $9.50 an hour, Al now generates a profit of

  • only 50 cents an hour for the owner. Bob produces $12 worth of burgers an hour, at a cost of

  • $9.50 an hour, Bob now generates a profit of $2.50 an hour. But look at what happens

  • to Carl. Carl produces $9.00 worth of burgers per hour, but he now costs the owner $9.50

  • per hour in wages. Carl is no longer generating profit for the owner. Carl now generates a

  • loss. In fact, the owner would be 50 cents an hour better off if he fires Carl.

  • The minimum wage was good for Al and Bob: they're each a $1.50 an hour better off

  • than they were before. But it was devastating for Carl. Carl lost his job and so is $8.00

  • an hour worse off than he was before. Here is the first lesson of the minimum wage. It

  • doesn't help the worker at the expense of the owner; it helps the more productive workers

  • at the expense of the less productive workers. What's even worse is that the more productive

  • workers usually don't need the help. What do you think would have happened over time

  • to Bob, the most productive worker? Either the owner would have rewarded Bob's higher

  • productivity with a raise, or if the owner didn't reward Bob, one of the owner's

  • competitors would have offered Bob more money to go work for the competitor. Either way,

  • eventually Bob would have ended up earning more anyway.

  • This is the second lesson of the minimum wage. Many of the workers that it does help would

  • have ended up better off anyway, even if the minimum wage hadn't existed. It works this

  • way in the real world; increases in the minimum wage have little effect on unemployment among

  • college graduates. Increases in the minimum wage increase unemployment among high school

  • graduates. And among the least skilled, least educated workers, increases in the minimum

  • wage significantly increase unemployment. The minimum wage may be a well-intentioned

  • policy, but it often hurts the very workers who are in most need of our help.

Does the Minimum Wage Hurt Workers? Some politicians argue that raising the minimum

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