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Fight for $15

The Fight for $15 is an American political movement advocating for the minimum wage to be raised to USD$15 per hour. The federal minimum wage was last set at $7.25 per hour in 2009. The movement has involved strikes by child care, home healthcare, airport, gas station, convenience store, and fast food workers for increased wages and the right to form a labor union. The "Fight for $15" movement started in 2012, in response to workers' inability to cover their costs on such a low salary, as well as the stressful work conditions of many of the service jobs which pay the minimum wage.

A July 29, 2013 protest outside a McDonald's in New York City.
Minimum wage by U.S. state, Washington, D.C., and territory. In states with lower or no minimum wage, federal rates apply to workers covered by the Fair Labor Standards Act.[1] Special minimum wages apply to some workers in American Samoa.[2][3]
  No minimum wage
  Lower state minimum wage than federal
  Same state minimum wage as federal
  Higher state minimum wage than federal
  Special rules (American Samoa only)

The movement has seen successes on the state and local level. California, Massachusetts, New York (downstate only), Maryland, New Jersey, Illinois, Connecticut, Florida, Delaware, and Nebraska have passed laws that gradually raise their state minimum wage to at least $15 per hour.[4][5] Major cities such as San Francisco, New York City and Seattle, where the cost of living is significantly higher, have already raised their municipal minimum wage to $15 per hour with some exceptions. On the federal level, the $15 proposal has become significantly more popular among Democratic politicians in the past few years, and was added to the party's platform in 2016 after Bernie Sanders advocated for it in his presidential campaign.[6]

In 2019, the Democratic-controlled House of Representatives passed the Raise the Wage Act, which would have gradually raised the minimum wage to $15 per hour. It was not taken up in the Republican-controlled Senate. In January 2021, Democrats in the Senate and House of Representatives reintroduced the bill.[7] In February 2021, the Congressional Budget Office released a report on the Raise the Wage Act of 2021 which estimated that incrementally raising the federal minimum wage to $15 an hour by 2025 would benefit 17 million workers, but would also reduce employment by 1.4 million people.[8][9][10] On February 27, 2021, the Democratic-controlled House passed the American Rescue Plan pandemic relief package, which included a gradual minimum wage increase to $15 per hour.[11] The measure was ultimately removed from the Senate version of the bill.[12]

Strikes and protests in the United States edit

 
US state minimum wages
 
Minimum wage by U.S. state, District of Columbia, and U.S. territory. Federal rate applies in states with no minimum wage. Territories listed in this table (see bottom of columns too): GU = Guam. VI = U.S. Virgin Islands. PR = Puerto Rico. CNMI = Northern Mariana Islands.[13][1] See abbreviations list.
 
History of the federal minimum wage. Lower line is nominal dollars. Top line is inflation-adjusted.[14][15]

On November 29, 2012, over 100 fast-food workers from McDonald's, Burger King, Wendy's, Domino's, Papa John's, Kentucky Fried Chicken and Pizza Hut walked off their jobs in New York City, New York in strike for higher wages, better working conditions and the right to form a union without retaliation from their managers.[16][17] Many workers were making the minimum wage at the time. However, many allegedly were making, and are currently making, less than the minimum wage due to wage theft on the part of their employers.[18] This was the largest strike in the history of the fast-food industry.[19] Earning less than a living wage has forced many fast-food workers to have multiple jobs and obtain forms of government assistance such as food stamps in order to afford basic food, shelter and clothing.[20] This rate is declared to be below what the Massachusetts Institute of Technology considers to be a "living wage" (based on cost of living and necessary expenses) for all five boroughs of New York City.[21] Time described this initial effort as seizing on the public's concern with economic inequality in the United States as stimulated by the Occupy Wall Street movement in 2011 and 2012.[22]

The strike was organized by over 40 personnel from New York Communities for Change, Service Employees International Union, UnitedNY, and the Black Institute.[23] On April 4, 2013 (the 45th anniversary of the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. during the Memphis sanitation strike), more than 200 fast-food workers went on strike in New York City. Hundreds of other workers went on strike in Chicago on April 24, in Detroit on May 10, in St. Louis on May 9 and 10, in Milwaukee on May 15 and in Seattle on May 30.[24][25][26]

On July 29, approximately 2,200 workers went on strike in all of the cities where fast-food workers had previously gone on strike with the addition of Flint, Michigan and Kansas City, Missouri.[27][28]

A coordinated national fast-food strike took place on August 29. In Seattle, Washington, the protests influenced candidate Ed Murray to release an "Economic Opportunity Agenda for Seattle". This agenda was later partially adopted by the Seattle city council, which voted to raise the minimum wage to $15.[29]

On December 6, 2013, further fast food strikes occurred nationwide in a campaign aimed at raising the minimum wage to $15 per hour.[30]

On September 4, 2014, another national strike took place in more than 150 cities, but this time thousands of Home care workers joined the fast food workers.[31][32] In another departure from previous protests, organizers shifted tactics and encouraged acts of civil disobedience such as sit ins to further draw attention to their cause. Between 159 and 436 arrests were made.[33][34] Striking fast food workers from Ferguson, Missouri, were arrested in Times Square, New York City, in solidarity with workers there nearly a month after the police Shooting of Michael Brown.[35]

On December 4, 2014, thousands of fast food workers walked off of the job in 190 U.S. cities to engage in further protests for $15 an hour and union representation, and were joined by caregivers, airport workers, and employees at discount and convenience stores. The strikes were also bolstered by anger over the deaths of Michael Brown and Eric Garner at the hands of police. Chants of "15 and a union" were accompanied by "Hands up, don't shoot" and "I can't breathe". Kendall Fells, organizing director for Fast Food Forward, claimed the strikes were "fights against injustice in the U.S."[36][37][38] Organizers from Black Lives Matter supported the strike.[39][40]

On April 15, 2015, tens of thousands of fast food workers in more than 200 cities took to the streets again in what labor organizers have described as the largest protest by low-wage workers in US history. In their campaign to raise the minimum wage to $15 an hour, labor activists and fast food workers were joined by home care assistants, Walmart workers, child-care aides, airport workers, adjunct professors and others who work low-wage jobs.[41] Gary Chaison, a professor of industrial relations at Clark University, noted that this protest movement is unique among labor disputes:

What is really significant about the Fight for $15 movement is – most labor disputes, look inside, they're about a group of workers covered by a collective bargaining agreement. In the Fight for $15, unions are helping to organize on a community basis, a group of workers who are on the fringe of the economy. It's not about union members protecting themselves. It's about moving other people up. This is the whole civil rights movement all over again.

Another strike took place in November 2015.[42] U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders (I-VT) voiced his support for the striking workers and a $15 an hour federal minimum wage at a Fight for $15 rally in Washington DC.[43][44]

 
Strike and a protest march for a $15 minimum wage in Dinkytown, Minnesota.

Global strikes and protests edit

On May 15, 2014, fast food workers in countries around the world, including Brazil, the United Kingdom, Japan and the U.S., went on strike to protest low wages in fast food restaurants.[45] The strikes took place in 230 cities as workers demanded a $15 minimum wage and the right to unionize without fear of retaliation.[46] Less than a week later, a mass protest at McDonald's headquarters in Oak Brook, Illinois took place and resulted in over 100 protesters being arrested, including workers, church leaders and Service Employees International Union president Mary Kay Henry, and a partial shutdown of the McDonald's campus.[47] According to the movement organizers, the protest took place in 30 cities in Japan, 5 cities in Brazil, 3 cities in India and 20 cities in Britain.[48] The labor federation with over 12 million workers in 126 countries joined the protest to help propel the effort.[48]

Industry officials say that only a small percentage of fast-food jobs pay the minimum wage and that those are largely entry-level jobs for workers under 25. Backers of the movement for higher pay point to studies saying that the average age of fast food workers is 29 and that more than one-fourth are parents raising children.[49] According to Mary Kay Henry, the president of service employees international union "fast food workers in many other parts of the world face the same corporate policy. Low pay, no guaranteed hours and no benefits". According to her, such unfairness in the wages exist due to the lack of opportunity for these workers to unionize.[50] According to one of McDonald's workers, the minimum wages is not enough to take care of his kids and their education. However, some analysts at conservative think tanks say that increasing the wages will have harmful consequences on the hiring rate which could cause a large number of unemployed people.[51][52]

Julie Sherry, an organizer of the protests in the United Kingdom, which have taken place on several occasions since January, projected that 100 workers would meet at 4 pm London time at the McDonald's in Trafalgar Square. They planned to carry signs declaring, "Fast Food Rights" and "Hungry for Justice" and to chant, "Zero Hours, No Way" — a reference to contracts in the UK that an estimated 90% of McDonald's workers have signed that don't guarantee them any hours but expect workers to come in whenever they are called.[53] Organizers say that in the Philippines, workers held a flash mob inside a Manila McDonald's, singing and dancing to "Let It Go", from the movie Frozen, urging McDonald's to "let go" of its low wages and allow workers to organize.[54] Protesters in Brussels shut down a McDonald's at lunchtime, and protesters in Mumbai who were threatened with arrests by local police were undeterred. Japan saw protests in nearly every prefecture and showed solidarity with U.S. workers by calling on McDonald's to pay Japanese workers 1,500 yen.[54]

This is not the first time that the workers protested against the low wages. On November 29, 2012, about 200 workers protested at a McDonald's at Madison Avenue and 40th Street chanting "Hey, hey, what do you say? We demand fair pay".[55] According to Kate Bronfenbrenner, director of labor education research at the Cornell University School of Industrial and Labor Relations, the workers global campaign is not a new idea. To determine the origins of this approach, you have to take a trip back to the 1800s, when workers in Britain and India jointly protested the way the East India Company treated its Indian workers.[56]

Some economists and labor activists are looking to the Danish socioeconomic model, with its powerful unions and living wages for fast-food workers, as evidence that companies can adapt in nations that have high wage floors, and that such a model can serve as an example to the United States. According to John Schmitt of the Center for Economic and Policy Research: "We see from Denmark that it's possible to run a profitable fast-food business while paying workers these kinds of wages." Stephen J. Caldeira, President and CEO of the International Franchise Association, an organization that has many fast-food companies as members, strongly disagrees and claims that "trying to compare the business and labor practices in Denmark and the U.S. is like comparing apples to autos."[57]

 
The fall 2013 issue of Ms. magazine about fast food worker wages

A January 2015 study by economists at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst found that fast food companies could absorb an incremental wage hike from $7.25 to $15 without shedding jobs by reducing turnover and slightly increasing prices.[58]

Affected industries edit

Restaurant industry edit

The impact on employers and workers within the restaurant industry is a major focus of the Fight for $15 movement. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, restaurants and other food services employ about sixty percent of all workers paid at or below the minimum wage, as of 2018.[59] Common responses to minimum wage increases include restaurant operators cutting employee hours and raising menu prices.[60] In cities such as New York City and Seattle that have already implemented a $15 minimum wage for most businesses, menu price increases have been a trend.[61] Politicians, economists, restaurant owners and workers continue to debate the economic viability and benefits of a federally mandated $15 minimum wage.

Economists of the Economic Policy Institute have largely come out in support of a $15 federal minimum wage.[62] Their outlined plan entails a gradual increase, reaching $15 by 2024. Fast-food restaurants are a key focus in the Fight for $15 movement. Some argue that turnover reductions, trend increases in sales growth, and modest annual price increases would allow for this bump in minimum wage without forcing the restaurants to shed employees.[63] While most advocates acknowledge rising prices as a result of the higher wages, they generally accept this outcome and believe it will not have a major negative impact on dining/overall sales. Advocates for the movement also point to research that finds the average estimated employment effect of minimum wage increases to be very small.[64]

A common argument against raising the minimum wage in restaurants to $15 is that it could cause cuts to employee hours, as well as potential layoffs or restaurant closures.[60]

Waiters, bartenders, and other food service workers who primarily work for tips may utilize the federal tipped minimum wage, which is currently $2.13 an hour. A tip credit is the difference between their minimum wage and the cash wage an employee is paid during a pay period, accounting for tips that do not add up to the federal minimum wage. Many advocates for a $15 minimum wage, including restaurant owners, believe that restaurants should get rid of the tip credit pay structure, as they find it is not beneficial to low wage restaurant workers.[65]

Retail edit

According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, 11,302,000 workers in the retail industry were paid hourly rates at or below the federal minimum wage in 2018.[66] Retail workers account for a significant portion of those affected by the minimum wage, as major retailers such as Target and Walmart are a big focus on this issue. Recently, some companies, including Target and Best Buy, have committed to boost their starting hourly wage to $15 an hour, regardless of local/federal minimum wage mandates.[67][68] As pressure grows, more stores are increasing their hourly rates both to satisfy political/social demands, while also benefiting from happier, more productive workers.[69]

Health care edit

Health care is one of the largest industries in the United States, with about 18.6 million workers as of 2019 and the numbers are growing.[70] According to The Brookings Institution, there were nearly 7 million people in low-paid health jobs in 2019 in the United States.[71] The median wage was $13.48 an hour for jobs in health care support, service, and direct care.[71] Given the discrepancy between wages in these categories and significantly higher pay for doctors and nurses, the fight for a living wage in health care has gained support.

Criticism and responses edit

Arguments for and against the movement are the same as arguments for and against the minimum wage. Opponents generally claim that higher wages will result in fewer working hours for each worker (nullifying the increased rate), increased unemployment, and higher consumer prices. Proponents generally point to the benefits for workers who earn a higher hourly rate, and claim that the higher prices are tolerable and promote a more equitable distribution of wealth. Economists disagree whether higher minimum wages cause unemployment among low-wage workers. In 2017 and 2018, the unemployment rate was very low nationally, and several states hit record low unemployment levels, with no clear pattern across high-wage vs. low-wage states.[72]

Former McDonald's CEO and President Ed Rensi cited the Fight for $15 movement as the reason for the installation of automated ordering kiosks at the chain's restaurants nationwide, which he says is an example of higher minimum wages causing unemployment.[73] Increased automation is treated as a benefit of a higher minimum wage by some advocates,[74] and economists generally view automation as a net positive because it increases labor productivity and allows employers to pay higher wages to workers because they are shifted to higher-value tasks.

Rensi and other critics say that some businesses, especially small businesses, cannot afford the capital investments needed for automation, or simply cannot afford higher labor costs. As a result, they are either driven out of business or relocate to lower-wage jurisdictions. Such cases are portrayed on the advocacy web site Faces of $15. Other businesses, including Amazon.com,[75] have voluntarily pledged to pay workers no less than $15 per hour (though through Amazon Robotics the company is also investing heavily in automation). Observers say businesses do this to reduce turnover and training costs, to compete for quality workers in a tight labor market, and to avoid negative publicity.

Other critics claim that an increased minimum wage would accelerate the speed of automation and displacement of minimum wage jobs, as employers replace low-skilled workers with machines, AI, and self-driving vehicles in common job sectors: retail, fast food service, call centers, trucking, and accounting. Universal basic income has been proposed as a progressive alternative.[76]

Achievements edit

 
Minimum wage by state and year

The Fight for $15 movement has succeeded in several states and cities in raising the minimum wage to $15 or more per hour. In California, the minimum wage has been raised in stages since 2016, starting from a rate of $10 per hour, and will reach $15 per hour in 2022.[77] Several cities in California have already raised the minimum wage to $15 or more, including Berkeley, El Cerrito, Emeryville, Mountain View, San Francisco, San Jose, San Mateo, and Sunnyvale.[78] Massachusetts passed the "Grand Bargain" law in 2018, which raises the state minimum wage to $15 per hour by 2023, after yearly increases from the $11/hour minimum reached in 2017.[79][80] The state of New York will raise the minimum wage in the Downstate region to $15 per hour in 2021, while in Upstate New York the minimum wage will be set by the Commissioner of Labor no lower than $12.50 per hour.[81] In New Jersey, the minimum wage will reach $15 per hour in 2024.[82] In March 2019, both Maryland and Illinois have explicitly passed laws or statutes on the process of "gradually increases over several years" raising their state minimum wage to at least $15 per hour.[5] In May 2019, Connecticut passed a $15 per hour law. On November 3, 2020, 61% of Florida voters passed Amendment 2, which raises the minimum wage to $10.00 per hour effective September 30, 2021, and then increases it annually by $1.00 per hour until the minimum wage reaches $15.00 per hour in 2026 and then reverts to being adjusted annually for inflation.

In the state of Washington, two cities have been described as test cases for the $15 minimum wage. Seattle was among the first U.S. cities to adopt a $15-per-hour plan in 2014, with its minimum wage for large employers raised to $15.45 in 2018 and $16 in 2019. Studies of Seattle's workforce have shown no decline in employment and tangible benefits for workers.[83] In SeaTac, a small suburban community whose economy centers around the Seattle–Tacoma International Airport, the minimum wage was increased to $15 per hour in 2014 without any intermediate stages, which resulted in heavy media attention.[84]

When the New York State Wage Board announced that the minimum wage in New York City would be raised to $15 an hour by December 31, 2018, Patrick McGeehan argued in the New York Times that it was a direct consequence of the Fight for $15 protests, and that "the labor protest movement that fast-food workers in New York City began nearly three years ago has led to higher wages for workers all across the country."[85]

A $15/hour minimum wage at Amazon took effect in November 2018.[75]

It is estimated that as a result of state and local minimum wage laws adopted since the Fight $15 began, an estimated 26 million workers have won $151 billion in raises.[86][87]

Exceptions edit

State and local governments which have raised their minimum wage to $15 per hour have often included exceptions, allowing certain types of employers to pay less or for certain types of employees to receive less. This is typically done with the intent of minimizing any potential negative impacts on the economy.

Employers and industries with labor unions are sometimes exempted from paying their employees the full minimum wage, to encourage the growth of organized labor. As of December 2014, unions were exempt from recent minimum wage increases in Chicago, SeaTac, Washington, and Milwaukee County, Wisconsin, as well as the California cities of Los Angeles, Long Beach, San Jose, Richmond, and Oakland. In San Francisco, a labor union may be exempt if its collective bargaining agreement explicitly waives the minimum wage requirement.[88]

In New Jersey, where the general minimum wage is set to be raised to $15 per hour in 2024, farmworkers are excluded and their minimum wage will be set at $12.50.[82]

Estimated economic impact of federal $15 wage edit

In February 2021, the Congressional Budget Office released a report on the Raise the Wage Act of 2021 which estimated that incrementally raising the federal minimum wage to $15 an hour by 2025 would benefit 17 million workers, but would also reduce employment by 1.4 million people.[8][9][10] It would also lift 0.9 million people out of poverty, possibly raise wages for an additional 10 million workers, and increase the federal budget deficit by $54 billion over ten years by increasing the cost of goods and services paid for by the federal government.[8][9][10] It would also cause prices to rise, and overall economic output to decrease slightly over the next 10 years.[8][89]

A few economists have disputed some of the report's findings. University of California, Berkeley's Michael Reich has estimated that rather than increasing the deficit, a $15 minimum wage could increase federal tax revenue by $65 billion annually, because of increased payroll taxes and government spending on safety net programs is likely to decrease.[10][90] Arindrajit Dube stated that he thought the report's examination of relevant studies was not as comprehensive as a report he recently did and estimated that the job losses would be less than 500,000.[91][92]

See also edit

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • . QSRweb. August 19, 2013. Archived from the original on October 6, 2013. Retrieved October 5, 2013.
  • Shields, Annie (May 8, 2013). "Fast Food Workers Strike in St. Louis". The Nation. Retrieved October 5, 2013.
  • Fox, Emily Jane (April 4, 2013). "New York McDonald's, Domino's Pizza workers strike". CNN. Retrieved October 5, 2013.
  • Aronowitz, Nona Willis (December 11, 2012). "Why Most Walmart and Fast Food Workers Didn't Strike". The Nation. Retrieved October 5, 2013.
  • Robert Reich on the Fast Food Strike and Obama's Inequality Speech. Moyers & Company. December 5, 2013.
  • Moberg, David (December 6, 2013). A Death Knell for the McJob? In These Times. Retrieved December 6, 2013.
  • Berman, Jillian (December 12, 2013). Telling Fast Food Workers To 'Get A Better Job' Is Nonsense, In 1 Chart. The Huffington Post. Retrieved December 11, 2013.
  • Marie Rantzau, Louise (May 15, 2014). Reuters. Retrieved May 15, 2014.

fight, this, article, needs, updated, please, help, update, this, article, reflect, recent, events, newly, available, information, june, 2023, american, political, movement, advocating, minimum, wage, raised, hour, federal, minimum, wage, last, hour, 2009, mov. This article needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information June 2023 The Fight for 15 is an American political movement advocating for the minimum wage to be raised to USD 15 per hour The federal minimum wage was last set at 7 25 per hour in 2009 The movement has involved strikes by child care home healthcare airport gas station convenience store and fast food workers for increased wages and the right to form a labor union The Fight for 15 movement started in 2012 in response to workers inability to cover their costs on such a low salary as well as the stressful work conditions of many of the service jobs which pay the minimum wage A July 29 2013 protest outside a McDonald s in New York City Minimum wage by U S state Washington D C and territory In states with lower or no minimum wage federal rates apply to workers covered by the Fair Labor Standards Act 1 Special minimum wages apply to some workers in American Samoa 2 3 No minimum wage Lower state minimum wage than federal Same state minimum wage as federal Higher state minimum wage than federal Special rules American Samoa only The movement has seen successes on the state and local level California Massachusetts New York downstate only Maryland New Jersey Illinois Connecticut Florida Delaware and Nebraska have passed laws that gradually raise their state minimum wage to at least 15 per hour 4 5 Major cities such as San Francisco New York City and Seattle where the cost of living is significantly higher have already raised their municipal minimum wage to 15 per hour with some exceptions On the federal level the 15 proposal has become significantly more popular among Democratic politicians in the past few years and was added to the party s platform in 2016 after Bernie Sanders advocated for it in his presidential campaign 6 In 2019 the Democratic controlled House of Representatives passed the Raise the Wage Act which would have gradually raised the minimum wage to 15 per hour It was not taken up in the Republican controlled Senate In January 2021 Democrats in the Senate and House of Representatives reintroduced the bill 7 In February 2021 the Congressional Budget Office released a report on the Raise the Wage Act of 2021 which estimated that incrementally raising the federal minimum wage to 15 an hour by 2025 would benefit 17 million workers but would also reduce employment by 1 4 million people 8 9 10 On February 27 2021 the Democratic controlled House passed the American Rescue Plan pandemic relief package which included a gradual minimum wage increase to 15 per hour 11 The measure was ultimately removed from the Senate version of the bill 12 Contents 1 Strikes and protests in the United States 2 Global strikes and protests 3 Affected industries 3 1 Restaurant industry 3 2 Retail 3 3 Health care 4 Criticism and responses 5 Achievements 5 1 Exceptions 6 Estimated economic impact of federal 15 wage 7 See also 8 References 9 Further readingStrikes and protests in the United States edit nbsp US state minimum wages nbsp Minimum wage by U S state District of Columbia and U S territory Federal rate applies in states with no minimum wage Territories listed in this table see bottom of columns too GU Guam VI U S Virgin Islands PR Puerto Rico CNMI Northern Mariana Islands 13 1 See abbreviations list nbsp History of the federal minimum wage Lower line is nominal dollars Top line is inflation adjusted 14 15 On November 29 2012 over 100 fast food workers from McDonald s Burger King Wendy s Domino s Papa John s Kentucky Fried Chicken and Pizza Hut walked off their jobs in New York City New York in strike for higher wages better working conditions and the right to form a union without retaliation from their managers 16 17 Many workers were making the minimum wage at the time However many allegedly were making and are currently making less than the minimum wage due to wage theft on the part of their employers 18 This was the largest strike in the history of the fast food industry 19 Earning less than a living wage has forced many fast food workers to have multiple jobs and obtain forms of government assistance such as food stamps in order to afford basic food shelter and clothing 20 This rate is declared to be below what the Massachusetts Institute of Technology considers to be a living wage based on cost of living and necessary expenses for all five boroughs of New York City 21 Time described this initial effort as seizing on the public s concern with economic inequality in the United States as stimulated by the Occupy Wall Street movement in 2011 and 2012 22 The strike was organized by over 40 personnel from New York Communities for Change Service Employees International Union UnitedNY and the Black Institute 23 On April 4 2013 the 45th anniversary of the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr during the Memphis sanitation strike more than 200 fast food workers went on strike in New York City Hundreds of other workers went on strike in Chicago on April 24 in Detroit on May 10 in St Louis on May 9 and 10 in Milwaukee on May 15 and in Seattle on May 30 24 25 26 On July 29 approximately 2 200 workers went on strike in all of the cities where fast food workers had previously gone on strike with the addition of Flint Michigan and Kansas City Missouri 27 28 A coordinated national fast food strike took place on August 29 In Seattle Washington the protests influenced candidate Ed Murray to release an Economic Opportunity Agenda for Seattle This agenda was later partially adopted by the Seattle city council which voted to raise the minimum wage to 15 29 On December 6 2013 further fast food strikes occurred nationwide in a campaign aimed at raising the minimum wage to 15 per hour 30 On September 4 2014 another national strike took place in more than 150 cities but this time thousands of Home care workers joined the fast food workers 31 32 In another departure from previous protests organizers shifted tactics and encouraged acts of civil disobedience such as sit ins to further draw attention to their cause Between 159 and 436 arrests were made 33 34 Striking fast food workers from Ferguson Missouri were arrested in Times Square New York City in solidarity with workers there nearly a month after the police Shooting of Michael Brown 35 On December 4 2014 thousands of fast food workers walked off of the job in 190 U S cities to engage in further protests for 15 an hour and union representation and were joined by caregivers airport workers and employees at discount and convenience stores The strikes were also bolstered by anger over the deaths of Michael Brown and Eric Garner at the hands of police Chants of 15 and a union were accompanied by Hands up don t shoot and I can t breathe Kendall Fells organizing director for Fast Food Forward claimed the strikes were fights against injustice in the U S 36 37 38 Organizers from Black Lives Matter supported the strike 39 40 On April 15 2015 tens of thousands of fast food workers in more than 200 cities took to the streets again in what labor organizers have described as the largest protest by low wage workers in US history In their campaign to raise the minimum wage to 15 an hour labor activists and fast food workers were joined by home care assistants Walmart workers child care aides airport workers adjunct professors and others who work low wage jobs 41 Gary Chaison a professor of industrial relations at Clark University noted that this protest movement is unique among labor disputes What is really significant about the Fight for 15 movement is most labor disputes look inside they re about a group of workers covered by a collective bargaining agreement In the Fight for 15 unions are helping to organize on a community basis a group of workers who are on the fringe of the economy It s not about union members protecting themselves It s about moving other people up This is the whole civil rights movement all over again Another strike took place in November 2015 42 U S Senator Bernie Sanders I VT voiced his support for the striking workers and a 15 an hour federal minimum wage at a Fight for 15 rally in Washington DC 43 44 nbsp Strike and a protest march for a 15 minimum wage in Dinkytown Minnesota Global strikes and protests editOn May 15 2014 fast food workers in countries around the world including Brazil the United Kingdom Japan and the U S went on strike to protest low wages in fast food restaurants 45 The strikes took place in 230 cities as workers demanded a 15 minimum wage and the right to unionize without fear of retaliation 46 Less than a week later a mass protest at McDonald s headquarters in Oak Brook Illinois took place and resulted in over 100 protesters being arrested including workers church leaders and Service Employees International Union president Mary Kay Henry and a partial shutdown of the McDonald s campus 47 According to the movement organizers the protest took place in 30 cities in Japan 5 cities in Brazil 3 cities in India and 20 cities in Britain 48 The labor federation with over 12 million workers in 126 countries joined the protest to help propel the effort 48 Industry officials say that only a small percentage of fast food jobs pay the minimum wage and that those are largely entry level jobs for workers under 25 Backers of the movement for higher pay point to studies saying that the average age of fast food workers is 29 and that more than one fourth are parents raising children 49 According to Mary Kay Henry the president of service employees international union fast food workers in many other parts of the world face the same corporate policy Low pay no guaranteed hours and no benefits According to her such unfairness in the wages exist due to the lack of opportunity for these workers to unionize 50 According to one of McDonald s workers the minimum wages is not enough to take care of his kids and their education However some analysts at conservative think tanks say that increasing the wages will have harmful consequences on the hiring rate which could cause a large number of unemployed people 51 52 Julie Sherry an organizer of the protests in the United Kingdom which have taken place on several occasions since January projected that 100 workers would meet at 4 pm London time at the McDonald s in Trafalgar Square They planned to carry signs declaring Fast Food Rights and Hungry for Justice and to chant Zero Hours No Way a reference to contracts in the UK that an estimated 90 of McDonald s workers have signed that don t guarantee them any hours but expect workers to come in whenever they are called 53 Organizers say that in the Philippines workers held a flash mob inside a Manila McDonald s singing and dancing to Let It Go from the movie Frozen urging McDonald s to let go of its low wages and allow workers to organize 54 Protesters in Brussels shut down a McDonald s at lunchtime and protesters in Mumbai who were threatened with arrests by local police were undeterred Japan saw protests in nearly every prefecture and showed solidarity with U S workers by calling on McDonald s to pay Japanese workers 1 500 yen 54 This is not the first time that the workers protested against the low wages On November 29 2012 about 200 workers protested at a McDonald s at Madison Avenue and 40th Street chanting Hey hey what do you say We demand fair pay 55 According to Kate Bronfenbrenner director of labor education research at the Cornell University School of Industrial and Labor Relations the workers global campaign is not a new idea To determine the origins of this approach you have to take a trip back to the 1800s when workers in Britain and India jointly protested the way the East India Company treated its Indian workers 56 Some economists and labor activists are looking to the Danish socioeconomic model with its powerful unions and living wages for fast food workers as evidence that companies can adapt in nations that have high wage floors and that such a model can serve as an example to the United States According to John Schmitt of the Center for Economic and Policy Research We see from Denmark that it s possible to run a profitable fast food business while paying workers these kinds of wages Stephen J Caldeira President and CEO of the International Franchise Association an organization that has many fast food companies as members strongly disagrees and claims that trying to compare the business and labor practices in Denmark and the U S is like comparing apples to autos 57 nbsp The fall 2013 issue of Ms magazine about fast food worker wagesA January 2015 study by economists at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst found that fast food companies could absorb an incremental wage hike from 7 25 to 15 without shedding jobs by reducing turnover and slightly increasing prices 58 Affected industries editRestaurant industry edit The impact on employers and workers within the restaurant industry is a major focus of the Fight for 15 movement According to the U S Bureau of Labor Statistics restaurants and other food services employ about sixty percent of all workers paid at or below the minimum wage as of 2018 59 Common responses to minimum wage increases include restaurant operators cutting employee hours and raising menu prices 60 In cities such as New York City and Seattle that have already implemented a 15 minimum wage for most businesses menu price increases have been a trend 61 Politicians economists restaurant owners and workers continue to debate the economic viability and benefits of a federally mandated 15 minimum wage Economists of the Economic Policy Institute have largely come out in support of a 15 federal minimum wage 62 Their outlined plan entails a gradual increase reaching 15 by 2024 Fast food restaurants are a key focus in the Fight for 15 movement Some argue that turnover reductions trend increases in sales growth and modest annual price increases would allow for this bump in minimum wage without forcing the restaurants to shed employees 63 While most advocates acknowledge rising prices as a result of the higher wages they generally accept this outcome and believe it will not have a major negative impact on dining overall sales Advocates for the movement also point to research that finds the average estimated employment effect of minimum wage increases to be very small 64 A common argument against raising the minimum wage in restaurants to 15 is that it could cause cuts to employee hours as well as potential layoffs or restaurant closures 60 Waiters bartenders and other food service workers who primarily work for tips may utilize the federal tipped minimum wage which is currently 2 13 an hour A tip credit is the difference between their minimum wage and the cash wage an employee is paid during a pay period accounting for tips that do not add up to the federal minimum wage Many advocates for a 15 minimum wage including restaurant owners believe that restaurants should get rid of the tip credit pay structure as they find it is not beneficial to low wage restaurant workers 65 Retail edit According to the U S Bureau of Labor Statistics 11 302 000 workers in the retail industry were paid hourly rates at or below the federal minimum wage in 2018 66 Retail workers account for a significant portion of those affected by the minimum wage as major retailers such as Target and Walmart are a big focus on this issue Recently some companies including Target and Best Buy have committed to boost their starting hourly wage to 15 an hour regardless of local federal minimum wage mandates 67 68 As pressure grows more stores are increasing their hourly rates both to satisfy political social demands while also benefiting from happier more productive workers 69 Health care edit Health care is one of the largest industries in the United States with about 18 6 million workers as of 2019 and the numbers are growing 70 According to The Brookings Institution there were nearly 7 million people in low paid health jobs in 2019 in the United States 71 The median wage was 13 48 an hour for jobs in health care support service and direct care 71 Given the discrepancy between wages in these categories and significantly higher pay for doctors and nurses the fight for a living wage in health care has gained support Criticism and responses editArguments for and against the movement are the same as arguments for and against the minimum wage Opponents generally claim that higher wages will result in fewer working hours for each worker nullifying the increased rate increased unemployment and higher consumer prices Proponents generally point to the benefits for workers who earn a higher hourly rate and claim that the higher prices are tolerable and promote a more equitable distribution of wealth Economists disagree whether higher minimum wages cause unemployment among low wage workers In 2017 and 2018 the unemployment rate was very low nationally and several states hit record low unemployment levels with no clear pattern across high wage vs low wage states 72 Former McDonald s CEO and President Ed Rensi cited the Fight for 15 movement as the reason for the installation of automated ordering kiosks at the chain s restaurants nationwide which he says is an example of higher minimum wages causing unemployment 73 Increased automation is treated as a benefit of a higher minimum wage by some advocates 74 and economists generally view automation as a net positive because it increases labor productivity and allows employers to pay higher wages to workers because they are shifted to higher value tasks Rensi and other critics say that some businesses especially small businesses cannot afford the capital investments needed for automation or simply cannot afford higher labor costs As a result they are either driven out of business or relocate to lower wage jurisdictions Such cases are portrayed on the advocacy web site Faces of 15 Other businesses including Amazon com 75 have voluntarily pledged to pay workers no less than 15 per hour though through Amazon Robotics the company is also investing heavily in automation Observers say businesses do this to reduce turnover and training costs to compete for quality workers in a tight labor market and to avoid negative publicity Other critics claim that an increased minimum wage would accelerate the speed of automation and displacement of minimum wage jobs as employers replace low skilled workers with machines AI and self driving vehicles in common job sectors retail fast food service call centers trucking and accounting Universal basic income has been proposed as a progressive alternative 76 Achievements edit nbsp Minimum wage by state and yearThe Fight for 15 movement has succeeded in several states and cities in raising the minimum wage to 15 or more per hour In California the minimum wage has been raised in stages since 2016 starting from a rate of 10 per hour and will reach 15 per hour in 2022 77 Several cities in California have already raised the minimum wage to 15 or more including Berkeley El Cerrito Emeryville Mountain View San Francisco San Jose San Mateo and Sunnyvale 78 Massachusetts passed the Grand Bargain law in 2018 which raises the state minimum wage to 15 per hour by 2023 after yearly increases from the 11 hour minimum reached in 2017 79 80 The state of New York will raise the minimum wage in the Downstate region to 15 per hour in 2021 while in Upstate New York the minimum wage will be set by the Commissioner of Labor no lower than 12 50 per hour 81 In New Jersey the minimum wage will reach 15 per hour in 2024 82 In March 2019 both Maryland and Illinois have explicitly passed laws or statutes on the process of gradually increases over several years raising their state minimum wage to at least 15 per hour 5 In May 2019 Connecticut passed a 15 per hour law On November 3 2020 61 of Florida voters passed Amendment 2 which raises the minimum wage to 10 00 per hour effective September 30 2021 and then increases it annually by 1 00 per hour until the minimum wage reaches 15 00 per hour in 2026 and then reverts to being adjusted annually for inflation In the state of Washington two cities have been described as test cases for the 15 minimum wage Seattle was among the first U S cities to adopt a 15 per hour plan in 2014 with its minimum wage for large employers raised to 15 45 in 2018 and 16 in 2019 Studies of Seattle s workforce have shown no decline in employment and tangible benefits for workers 83 In SeaTac a small suburban community whose economy centers around the Seattle Tacoma International Airport the minimum wage was increased to 15 per hour in 2014 without any intermediate stages which resulted in heavy media attention 84 When the New York State Wage Board announced that the minimum wage in New York City would be raised to 15 an hour by December 31 2018 Patrick McGeehan argued in the New York Times that it was a direct consequence of the Fight for 15 protests and that the labor protest movement that fast food workers in New York City began nearly three years ago has led to higher wages for workers all across the country 85 A 15 hour minimum wage at Amazon took effect in November 2018 75 It is estimated that as a result of state and local minimum wage laws adopted since the Fight 15 began an estimated 26 million workers have won 151 billion in raises 86 87 Exceptions edit State and local governments which have raised their minimum wage to 15 per hour have often included exceptions allowing certain types of employers to pay less or for certain types of employees to receive less This is typically done with the intent of minimizing any potential negative impacts on the economy Employers and industries with labor unions are sometimes exempted from paying their employees the full minimum wage to encourage the growth of organized labor As of December 2014 unions were exempt from recent minimum wage increases in Chicago SeaTac Washington and Milwaukee County Wisconsin as well as the California cities of Los Angeles Long Beach San Jose Richmond and Oakland In San Francisco a labor union may be exempt if its collective bargaining agreement explicitly waives the minimum wage requirement 88 In New Jersey where the general minimum wage is set to be raised to 15 per hour in 2024 farmworkers are excluded and their minimum wage will be set at 12 50 82 Estimated economic impact of federal 15 wage editIn February 2021 the Congressional Budget Office released a report on the Raise the Wage Act of 2021 which estimated that incrementally raising the federal minimum wage to 15 an hour by 2025 would benefit 17 million workers but would also reduce employment by 1 4 million people 8 9 10 It would also lift 0 9 million people out of poverty possibly raise wages for an additional 10 million workers and increase the federal budget deficit by 54 billion over ten years by increasing the cost of goods and services paid for by the federal government 8 9 10 It would also cause prices to rise and overall economic output to decrease slightly over the next 10 years 8 89 A few economists have disputed some of the report s findings University of California Berkeley s Michael Reich has estimated that rather than increasing the deficit a 15 minimum wage could increase federal tax revenue by 65 billion annually because of increased payroll taxes and government spending on safety net programs is likely to decrease 10 90 Arindrajit Dube stated that he thought the report s examination of relevant studies was not as comprehensive as a report he recently did and estimated that the job losses would be less than 500 000 91 92 See also edit nbsp Food portalList of countries by minimum wage Income inequality in the United States Justice for Workers Canadian movement Labor history of the United States One Fair Wage Poverty in the United States McDonald s and unionsReferences edit a b State Minimum Wage Laws Wage and Hour Division WHD United States Department of Labor Click on states on that map to see exact minimum wage info by state See bottom of page for District of Columbia and U S territories See table and abbreviations list Wage Rates in American Samoa Wage and Hour Division of the U S Department of Labor Wage Rate in American Samoa PDF Wage and Hour Division WHD United States Department of Labor Delaware becomes the 10th state plus Washington D C to raise the minimum wage to 15 an hour July 19 2021 a b Maryland just became the sixth state to raise the minimum wage to 15 an hour March 28 2019 Weigel David July 9 2016 Democrats back 15 minimum wage but stalemate on Social Security The Washington Post Democrats introduce bill to hike federal minimum wage to 15 per hour CNBC January 16 2019 a b c d The Budgetary Effects of the Raise the Wage Act of 2021 PDF Congressional Budget Office February 1 2021 Archived PDF from the original on February 8 2021 Retrieved February 9 2021 a b c Selyukh Alina February 8 2021 15 Minimum Wage Would Reduce Poverty But Cost Jobs CBO Says NPR Raising the federal minimum wage to 15 an hour by 2025 would increase wages for at least 17 million people but also put 1 4 million Americans out of work according to a study by the Congressional Budget Office released on Monday a b c d Rosenberg Eli February 8 2021 CBO report finds 15 minimum wage would cost jobs but lower poverty levels The Washington Post Raising the minimum wage to 15 an hour would significantly reduce poverty and increase earnings for millions of low wage workers while adding to the federal deficit and cutting overall employment according to a new study from the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office On one hand the CBO estimated that raising the minimum wage to 15 an hour by 2025 would cost 1 4 million jobs and increase the deficit by 54 billion over 10 years But it also estimated the policy would lift 900 000 people out of poverty and raise income for 17 million people about 1 in 10 workers Another 10 million who have wages just above that amount could potentially see increases as well the CBO reported American Rescue Plan What s in the House s 1 9 trillion coronavirus relief plan The Washington Post February 27 2021 Senate passes 1 9 trillion Biden relief bill after voting overnight on amendments sends measure back to House The Washington Post March 6 2021 Consolidated Minimum Wage Table From Wage and Hour Division of the U S Department of Labor See abbreviations list Congressional Research Service March 2 2023 State Minimum Wages An Overview Chart on page 3 FRED Graph Using U S Department of Labor data Federal Minimum Hourly Wage for Nonfarm Workers for the United States Inflation adjusted by FRED via the Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers All Items in U S City Average CPIAUCSL Run cursor over graph for nominal and real minimum wage by month Resnikoff Nedd November 29 2012 New York s fast food workers strike Why now MSNBC Semuels Alana November 29 2012 Fast food workers walk out in N Y amid rising U S labor unrest Los Angeles Times Turkewitz Julie May 15 2013 State Said To Be Reviewing Pay For Fast Food Workers The New York Times Resnikoff Ned November 30 2012 After the Strike Fast Food Workers Expect Support To Grow MSNBC Migoya David October 15 2013 Fast Food Workers Cost taxpayers nearly 7 billion in welfare costs The Denver Post Living Wage Calculator Living Wage Calculation for Dutchess County New York Livingwage mit edu Retrieved November 10 2015 Sanburn Josh July 30 2013 Fast Food Strikes Unable to Unionize Workers Borrow Tactics From Occupy Time Retrieved May 22 2015 NY Fast Food Workers Serve Up a Fight for Economic Justice February 1 2013 Resnikoff Ned April 4 2013 Historic fast food strike draws lessons from MLK s last campaign MSNBC Retrieved November 10 2015 Greenhouse Steven November 29 2012 With Day of Protests Fast Food Workers Seek More Pay The New York Times Davidson Paul May 14 2013 Fast food workers stage protests for higher wages USA Today Fast food workers strike nationwide in protest against wages Fox News August 29 2013 Greenhouse Stephen July 31 2013 A Day s Strike Seeks to Raise Fast Food Pay The New York Times Rolf David 2016 The Fight for Fifteen The Right Wage for a Working America The New Press via ProQuest Ebook Central Fast food workers rally nationwide for higher wages Los Angeles Times December 5 2013 Retrieved January 8 2021 Berman Jillian September 4 2014 Why This Week s Fast Food Protests Are History In The Making HuffPost Retrieved September 4 2014 WFTS Webteam September 4 2014 Fast food workers protest at McDonald s in Tampa Temple Terrace abcactionnews com Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved November 10 2015 Berman Jillian September 4 2014 Demonstrators Arrested At Fast Food Protests In Cities Across The Country Photos HuffPost Retrieved September 4 2014 Rushe Dominic Gambino Lauren Carroll Rory Guarino Mark September 4 2014 Hundreds of fast food protesters arrested while striking against low wages The Guardian Retrieved September 4 2014 Smith Michael Kirby Laffin Ben Archdeacon Colin September 5 2014 A Ferguson Activist in New York The New York Times Retrieved November 10 2015 Gittleson Kim December 4 2014 US fast food worker protests expand to 190 cities BBC News Wojcik John December 4 2014 Fast food workers walk off the job in 190 cities People s World Retrieved December 4 2014 Margolin Emma December 4 2014 Fast food workers strike fueled by other low wage employees Eric Garner MSNBC Retrieved December 5 2014 Greenhouse Steven March 30 2015 Movement to Increase McDonald s Minimum Wage Broadens Its Tactics The New York Times Retrieved May 22 2015 Woodman Spencer April 16 2015 The Biggest Fast Food Strike in History Was About More Than a 15 Minimum Wage Vice Media Retrieved May 22 2015 Greenhouse Steven Kasperkevic Jana April 15 2015 Fight for 15 swells into largest protest by low wage workers in US history The Guardian Retrieved April 15 2015 Fast food workers strike seeking 15 wage political muscle Msn com Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved November 10 2015 Prupis Nadia November 10 2015 Fifteen Bucks and a Union Bernie Sanders Marches With Striking Workers Common Dreams Devaney Tim November 10 2015 Bernie Sanders rallies with striking Capitol workers in the rain The Hill Jillian Berman May 15 2014 America s Terrible Fast Food Pay Has Gone Global And Workers Are Fighting Back The Huffington Post Retrieved May 15 2014 Erika Eichelberger May 15 2014 Fast Food Strikes Go Global Mother Jones Retrieved May 15 2014 Dominic Rushe May 21 2014 Over 100 arrested near McDonald s headquarters in protest over low pay The Guardian Retrieved May 26 2014 a b Steven Greenhouse fast food protests spread overseas The New York Times May 14 2014 August 10 2014 Steven Greenhouse Wage strikes planned at fast food outlets The New York Times December 1 2013 August 10 2014 Steven Greenhouse Fast food protests spread overseas The New York Times May 14 2014 August 10 2014 Bourne Ryan The Case against A 15 Federal Minimum Wage Q amp A Cato Institute Retrieved April 6 2021 Perry Mark August 23 2016 Minimum wage effect DC restaurants lost more jobs since January than any 6 month period since 2001 recession AEI American Enterprise Institute Retrieved April 6 2021 Laura Shin fastfood workers protest over minimum wage spread across the globe Forbes May 15 2014 August 10 2014 a b Laura Shin fast food workers protest over minimum wage spread across the globe Forbes May 15 2014 August 10 2014 Steven Greenhouse With day of protests fast food workers seek more pay The New York Times November 12 2012 August 10 2014 Claire Zillman Fast food strikes why going global could work Fortune May 13 2014 August 10 2014 Liz Alderman and Steven Greenhouse October 27 2014 Living Wages Rarity for U S Fast Food Workers Served Up in Denmark The New York Times Retrieved October 28 2014 Ned Resnikoff January 23 2015 Report Fast food industry could survive 15 minimum wage Al Jazeera America Retrieved February 1 2015 Characteristics of minimum wage workers 2018 BLS Reports U S Bureau of Labor Statistics www bls gov Retrieved July 23 2020 a b Lucas Amelia April 10 2019 Higher minimum wage means restaurants raise prices and fewer employee hours survey finds CNBC Retrieved July 23 2020 Romich Jennifer L Allard Scott W Obara Emmi E Althauser Anne K Buszkiewicz James H March 1 2020 Employer Responses to a City Level Minimum Wage Mandate Early Evidence from Seattle Urban Affairs Review 56 2 451 479 doi 10 1177 1078087418787667 ISSN 1078 0874 S2CID 158327553 Economists in support of a federal minimum wage of 15 by 2024 Economic Policy Institute Retrieved July 23 2020 Pollin Robert Wicks Lim Jeannette July 2 2016 A 15 U S Minimum Wage How the Fast Food Industry Could Adjust Without Shedding Jobs Journal of Economic Issues 50 3 716 744 doi 10 1080 00213624 2016 1210382 ISSN 0021 3624 S2CID 157629923 Gradually raising the minimum wage to 15 would be good for workers good for businesses and good for the economy Testimony before the U S House of Representatives Committee on Education and Labor Economic Policy Institute Retrieved July 23 2020 Cohen Amanda September 6 2019 Actually a Higher Minimum Wage Is Good for Restaurants Eater Retrieved July 23 2020 Characteristics of low wage workers 2018 PDF U S Bureau of Labor Statistics Repko Melissa June 17 2020 Target raises minimum wage to 15 an hour months before its deadline CNBC Retrieved July 23 2020 Friedman Gillian July 22 2020 Best Buy to join retailers paying a 15 minimum wage The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved July 23 2020 Fisman Ray Luca Michael October 10 2018 How Amazon s Higher Wages Could Increase Productivity Harvard Business Review ISSN 0017 8012 Retrieved July 23 2020 Leigh J Paul February 2019 Arguments for and Against the 15 Minimum Wage for Health Care Workers American Journal of Public Health 109 2 206 207 doi 10 2105 AJPH 2018 304880 ISSN 0090 0036 PMC 6336047 PMID 30649937 a b Kinder Molly May 28 2020 Essential but undervalued Millions of health care workers aren t getting the pay or respect they deserve in the COVID 19 pandemic Brookings Retrieved July 23 2020 Conradis Brandon April 23 2018 14 states hit record low unemployment TheHill Retrieved March 17 2019 Flows Capital Thanks To Fight For 15 Minimum Wage McDonald s Unveils Job Replacing Self Service Kiosks Nationwide Forbes Retrieved March 17 2019 Minimum Wages in canada theory evidence and policy Hrsdc gc ca March 7 2008 Archived from the original on April 2 2012 Retrieved October 5 2011 a b Chappell Bill Wamsley Laurel October 2 2018 Amazon Sets 15 Minimum Wage For U S Employees Including Temps NPR Retrieved March 17 2019 Ferenstein Gregory New Study Suggests Minimum Wage Leads To Automation Of Low Skill Workers Forbes Retrieved August 21 2019 Dillon Liam and John Myers Gov Brown hails deal to raise minimum wage to 15 as matter of economic justice Los Angeles Times March 28 2016 Minimum Wage California State Cities Tribes Towns San Francisco San Diego Palo Alto LA Miwok Indians Paywizard org Retrieved March 17 2019 DeCosta Klipa Nik What you need to know about the grand bargain that Charlie Baker just signed into law Boston com June 28 2018 15 Minimum Wage Required Paid Leave Are Coming To Mass After Gov Baker Signs Grand Bargain www wbur org Retrieved March 17 2019 New York State Increases Minimum Wage and Enacts Paid Family Leave JDSupra com April 29 2016 a b Corasaniti Nick In New Jersey the Minimum Wage Is Set to Rise to 15 an Hour The New York Times January 17 2019 DePillis Lydia Seattle is a guinea pig for 15 minimum wage Here s what the latest research shows CNN October 23 2018 Kelly Gavin SeaTac the small US town that sparked a new movement against low wages The Guardian February 22 2014 Patrick McGeehan July 22 2015 New York Plans 15 an Hour Minimum Wage for Fast Food Workers The New York Times Retrieved July 30 2015 Lathrop Yannet Lester T William Wilson Matthew July 27 2021 Quantifying the Impact of the Fight for 15 150 Billion in Raises for 26 Million Workers With 76 Billion Going to Workers of Color National Employment Law Project Retrieved November 28 2022 Jones Sarah December 1 2018 For Low Wage Workers the Fight For 15 Movement Has Been a Boon Intelligencer Retrieved March 13 2019 Minimum wage loophole written to help labor unions Washington Examiner December 24 2014 Morath Eric Duehren Andrew February 8 2021 15 Minimum Wage Would Cut Employment Reduce Poverty CBO Study Finds Nonpartisan study says raising minimum wage would cost 1 4 million jobs but lift 900 000 people above the poverty line Wall Street Journal While many Americans would see raises the analysis showed a minimum wage increase would cause prices to rise the federal budget deficit to widen and overall economic output to slightly decrease over the next decade Higher wages would increase the cost of producing goods and services and businesses would pass some of those increased costs on to consumers in the form of higher prices resulting in reduced demand the CBO said Employers would consequently produce fewer goods and services and as a result they would tend to reduce their employment of workers at all wage levels the report said Young less educated people would account for a disproportionate share of those reductions in employment Reich Michael February 1 2021 Effect of a Federal Minimum Wage Increase to 15 by 2025 on the Federal Budget Institute for Research on Labor and Employment Dube Arindrajit February 24 2021 No a 15 minimum wage won t cost 1 4 million jobs Washington Post That s how it arrives at the figure of 1 4 million lost jobs Based on my own review of the overall evidence but still following CBO s approach I would estimate that a national minimum wage increase to 15 per hour would lead to job losses under 500 000 Dube Arindrajit 2019 Impacts of minimum wages review of the international evidence London HM Treasury p 41 ISBN 978 1 912809 89 9 Further reading edit QSR employees call for national day of strikes over wages QSRweb August 19 2013 Archived from the original on October 6 2013 Retrieved October 5 2013 Shields Annie May 8 2013 Fast Food Workers Strike in St Louis The Nation Retrieved October 5 2013 Fox Emily Jane April 4 2013 New York McDonald s Domino s Pizza workers strike CNN Retrieved October 5 2013 Aronowitz Nona Willis December 11 2012 Why Most Walmart and Fast Food Workers Didn t Strike The Nation Retrieved October 5 2013 Robert Reich on the Fast Food Strike and Obama s Inequality Speech Moyers amp Company December 5 2013 Moberg David December 6 2013 A Death Knell for the McJob In These Times Retrieved December 6 2013 Berman Jillian December 12 2013 Telling Fast Food Workers To Get A Better Job Is Nonsense In 1 Chart The Huffington Post Retrieved December 11 2013 Marie Rantzau Louise May 15 2014 I m making 21 an hour at McDonald s Why aren t you Reuters Retrieved May 15 2014 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fight for 15 amp oldid 1179596320, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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