Research Highlights Featured Chart
November 13, 2019
Fighting poverty with a living wage
New York City march to raise the minimum wage in America.
The All-Nite Images from NY, NY, USA [CC BY-SA 2.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0)]
Much of the recent debate about raising the federal minimum wage has focused on how much unemployment it causes. That’s a worthwhile question, but it ignores numerous ways that the poor can be helped and hurt by a minimum wage.
A more holistic approach, taken by a paper in the October issue of the American Economic Journal: Applied Economics, is to look at what happens to total family income.
Author Arindrajit Dube found that even though families lost welfare benefits, minimum wage laws significantly increased incomes for the poorest households.
Dube analyzed data from the Current Population Survey between 1984 and 2013—a much larger sample than previous studies.
Figure 7 from his paper shows how much family income at each percentile would increase if the minimum wage were raised by roughly 70 percent.
Figure 7 from Arindrajit Dube (2019)
The green line shows how much cash income would increase. The dashed blue line includes noncash transfers like food stamps and housing subsidies. And the dashed orange line further includes tax benefits such as child tax credits. (The vertical dashed red line indicates the federal poverty threshold—an average of $22,476 in this sample.)
The chart shows that all families in the bottom half of the income distribution benefit from the policy, including those making more than the minium wage. Families close to the poverty threshold see their cash income increase by $6,000 to $8,000. That number drops to about $4,000 when welfare benefits are taken into account, because households near the poverty line would no longer meet the eligibility requirements.
Increasing the federal minimum wage from the current $7.25 an hour to $12 an hour would reduce the poverty rate by as much as 2 percentage points, according to Dube’s estimates. Put differently, it would lift roughly 6 million Americans out of poverty.
Overall, Dube’s research indicates that minimum-wage policies are just as effective as other anti-poverty programs.