• Type of publication: Book
  • Research or In The Media: Research
  • Research Area: Labor Markets, Wages & Poverty
  • Publication Date: 2008-01-22
  • Authors:
    • Add Authors: Mark D. Brenner
    • Add Authors: Jeannette Wicks-Lim
    • Add Authors: Robert Pollin
    • Add Authors: Stephanie Luce
  • Show in Front Page Modules: Yes
A Measure of Fairness: The Economics of Living Wages and Minimum Wages in the United States

In early 2007, there were approximately 140 living wage ordinances in place throughout the United States. Communities around the country frequently debate new proposals of this sort. Additionally, as a result of ballot initiatives, twenty-nine states and the District of Columbia, representing nearly 70 percent of the total U.S. population, maintain minimum wage standards above those set by the federal minimum wage.

In A Measure of Fairness, Robert Pollin, Mark Brenner, Jeannette Wicks-Lim, and Stephanie Luce assess how well living wage and minimum wage regulations in the United States serve the workers they are intended to help. Opponents of such measures assert that when faced with mandated increases in labor costs, businesses will either lay off workers, hire fewer low-wage employees in the future, replace low-credentialed workers with those having better qualifications or, finally, even relocate to avoid facing the increased costs being imposed on them.

The authors give an overview of living wage and minimum wage implementation in Louisiana, New Mexico, Arizona, California, Massachusetts, and Connecticut to show how these policies play out in the paychecks of workers, in the halls of legislature, and in business ledgers. Based on a decade of research, this volume concludes that living wage laws and minimum wage increases have been effective policy interventions capable of bringing significant, if modest, benefits to the people they were intended to help.

Richard Freeman of Harvard University’s Economics Department writes: “The study of living wages in the United States has moved from an odd peripheral topic to a major issue in economic policy analysis largely because of the research reported in A Measure of Fairness. This volume defines the issues and provides a glow of empirical sunlight on an economic topic traditionally shrouded with ideology instead of evidence.” And Carol Oppenheimer and Morty Simon, living wage organizers in Santa Fe write that A Measure of Fairness “is a must-read for local activists, economists, and all political leaders concerned with economic justice.”

>> In this related interview, Jen Kern, Director of the ACORN Living Wage Resource Center and a linchpin of the living wage movement, offers her perspective on PERI's role in the living wage movement.

>> Order A Measure of Fairness from Cornell University Press

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