Want a Real Recovery? Raise the Minimum Wage.
By Terrance Heath
July 19, 2012 - 3:39pm ET
Scratch
the surface of just about any economic debate this election
year, and you'll find one issue that goes all the way to the core: the
yawning gap between the 1% and the rest of us, as skyrocketing income
inequality. A new report from the National Employment Law Project
(NELP), "Big Business, Corporate Profits, and the Minimum Wage,"
shows the extremes of that divide, and makes the case for raising the
federal minimum wage as a means of closing that gap, and putting the
national economy on the road to a
real recovery.
The report explores the connection between stagnant —and falling —
wages, and it's central finding explodes the argument that raising the
minimum wage will cause employers to stop hiring, and the hurt small
businesses that opponents of a minimum wage increase (and of the idea of
a minimum wage itself) claim are the primary employers of low-wage
workers.
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