Friday, 5 April 2013

Raising the minimum wage for Jobs in San Jose



Policy makers are struggling to create relevant public policies that can boost the broader economy and help the low – wage workers without burdening tax payers, in the lingering aftermath of the Recession.

Raising the minimum wage is an often adopted solution by local governments, especially such as that of San Jose. 

New Minimum Wage Policy

Workers in Minimum wage jobs in San Jose have received an enormous raise from $8 to $10 an hour. The 25 percent raise is the single biggest minimum wage increase that the country has seen. Estimated 40,000 minimum wage workers will see their new pay rise.  In addition, to cease San Jose's lowest wage workers pay, from eroding over time, annual indexing in 2014 is proposed in the initiative. 

Why support the policy?

The wages of the state's lowest paid workers haven't budged in spite of the gas, food and health prices that have risen over the past four years. It is increasingly difficult for the families to make their ends met with a wearing minimum wage and ongoing weak recovery. It is good policy to put a little more money in the hands of those who greatly need it and will spend much of it locally.

Will it lead to San Jose jobs loss?

Old findings of job losses erroneously attributed to the minimum wage as they failed to account for regional economic shocks and long-run trends in low-wage employment. A study published in Industrial Relations Journal found that even during times of high unemployment increases in the minimum wage did not cause job loss. 

How does minimum wage increase help?

Higher minimum wage boosts the broader economy. According to the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, every $1 in hourly wage increase for a minimum wage worker yields in $2,800 in new consumer spending by his or her household in the following year. Business community who once opposed it now sees it as a way to boost worker productivity and profits. Broad benefits include: Workers get bigger paychecks; the economy gets a boost; and employers have lower turnover rates and vacancies with better recruitment opportunities, and improved productivity from experienced workers.

Raising San Jose's minimum wage to $10 and adjusting it for inflation means the recovery will be more broadly shared and much more sustainable.