It’s time to raise minimum wage

It’s time to raise minimum wage

The Torah provides a moral imperative: “Justice, justice shall you pursue.”  In practical terms in today’s economic environment, that means at the very least we should support a just minimum wage – a wage that will enable working people to support themselves and their families. And we must partner with others to ensure that it happens.

We in the Jewish Labor Committee are proud to be part of this campaign both on the federal level and in Massachusetts, New Jersey, Washington, D.C., Los Angeles and wherever state and local governments are attempting to act while Congress fails to.

The current federal minimum wage isn’t a living wage. At $7.25 an hour, today’s full-time minimum-wage worker makes just $15,080 a year. Even in a family with two people working minimum-wage jobs, household income hovers at the poverty level. And that’s assuming they are lucky enough to have full-time jobs.

Moreover, the makeup of minimum-wage workers has changed. Partly because of the latest economic downturn, more low-wage workers today are older and better-educated than ever. In addition, more of those earning the minimum wage are supporting their families, not teens earning money for movie tickets.

Meanwhile, the purchasing power of the minimum wage has plummeted. From January 1981 to April 1990, the federal minimum wage was never raised. In 2007, Congress raised the federal minimum wage by $2.10 to $7.25 per hour as a first step toward restoring it to its historic value. But for the minimum wage to have the same purchasing power today that it had in 1968, it would have to be more than $10 per hour now. 

American Jews should remember the situation confronting so many of our ancestors who could earn only poverty wages in the garment trades and other sectors when they first arrived in the United States.

The challenges confronting those in minimum-wage jobs today are no less daunting. They are the workers who care for our elderly parents, wash our cars, pick our produce, clean our offices and work at fast-food restaurants. The vast majority work multiple minimum-wage jobs to support their families, and they are still struggling, faced with terrible choices over which bills to pay — rent or heat, groceries or medicine — that none among us should be forced to make.

A comprehensive study by the Economic Policy Institute points out the benefits of raising the minimum wage. An increase to $10.10 by July 1, 2015 would raise the wages of about 30 million workers, who would receive more than $51 billion in additional wages over the phase-in period, increase the gross domestic product by roughly $32.6 billion and create a net gain of 140,000 new jobs.

It would not, as many conservatives claim, kill jobs. Moreover, it would be an important step in closing the widening income gap.

So we need to raise the federal minimum wage. Yet, much of the business sector and its allies continue to stymie even modest attempts to lift federal minimum-wage workers out of poverty.

Why? Essentially because they can.  In a weak economy with many unemployed, companies can use their enhanced bargaining power to cut wages, benefits and hours.

Of course, not all the blame for low-wage workers lies with the businesses that employ them. The consuming public also plays a role. Too often, we fail to make the link between low prices and widespread poverty.

Some states, frustrated by the inability of Congress to raise the federal minimum wage, have raised the minimum wage locally.  This needs to be done nationally — and it needs to be done now.  But until it happens, states and cities can fill some of the gap by raising their minimum-wage levels.

The delegates at this year’s annual Plenum of the Jewish Council for Public Affairs overwhelmingly passed a resolution in support of increasing the minimum wage, which the JLC co-sponsored.  Among the steps the JCPA resolution proposed were educating about the failure of the minimum wage to keep pace with the cost of living and how it is too low to keep workers and their families out of poverty; advocating for legislation increasing the federal minimum wage and for increases in the minimum wage at state and local levels; and encouraging Jewish organizations to institute a $10.10 minimum-wage policy for all of their employees and their contractors’ employees.

If we are to provide a measure of justice where it counts to the least well-paid among us, we have to do our part to support an increase in the minimum wage. We must partner with others to ensure it happens. We need to talk about it with our friends, families and neighbors. 

We in the Jewish Labor Committee are proud to be part of this campaign and encourage the wider community to join. It’s the right and just thing to do.

(Stuart Appelbaum is president of the Jewish Labor Committee and president of the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union, UFCW. Lynne Fox is chair of the Philadelphia JLC and executive vice president of Workers United, affiliated with SEIU.)

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