More Than 500 Economists Oppose Minimum Wage Hike

Economy |
By Rik W. Hafer | Read Time 2 minutes

In an open letter released March 12, 2014, more than 500 economists voiced their agreement that increasing the federal minimum wage to $10.10 would not reduce poverty. The letter’s release coincided with hearings in the U.S. Senate’s Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP) Committee to debate raising the federal minimum wage. The letter notes that poverty is a complex issue and simply raising the minimum wage is not “a silver bullet solution.” The letter’s signatories include Nobel laureates Eugene Fama, Edward Prescott, and Vernon Smith along with a number of previous administration officials, among them Glenn Hubbard, Greg Mankiw, and Harvey Rosen, all past chairs of the Council of Economic Advisors. (The full letter and list of signatories is available here.)

Raising the minimum wage costs jobs for the very workers it is supposed to help. A recent study by the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) found that the proposed increase would cost the economy 500,000 jobs by 2016. This outcome from raising the minimum wage agrees with previous work, including analysis that David Neumark and I wrote for the Show-Me Institute.

Missouri policymakers must consider the full impact of raising the minimum wage. It simply is not good public policy to raise wages for some individuals at the expense of other workers who are made even worse off than they are now. The minimum wage simply is not a viable policy tool to fight poverty.

About the Author

Rik Hafer is an associate professor of economics and the Director of the Center for Economics and the Environment at Lindenwood University in St. Charles, Missouri.  He was previously a distinguished research professor of economics and finance at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville. After receiving his Ph.D. from Virginia Tech in 1979, Rik worked in the research department of the Federal Reserve Bank of Saint Louis from 1979 to 1989, rising to the position of research officer. He has taught at several institutions, including Saint Louis University, Washington University in Saint Louis, the Stonier Graduate School of Banking, and Erasmus University in Rotterdam. While at Southern Illinois University at Edwardsville, Rik served as a consultant to the Central Bank of the Philippines, as a research fellow with the Institute of Urban Research, and as a visiting scholar with the Federal Reserve Banks of Atlanta and St. Louis. He has published nearly 100 academic articles and is the author, co-author, or editor of five books on monetary policy and financial markets. He also is the co-author of the textbook Principles of Macroeconomics: The Way We Live. He has written numerous commentaries that have appeared in The Wall Street Journal, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, the St. Louis Business Journal, the Illinois Business Journal, and the St. Louis Beacon. He has appeared on local and national radio and television programs, including CNBCs Power Lunch.

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