US Chamber of Commerce

In the near future, the U.S. House of Representatives is expected to consider the Raise the Wage Act (H.R. 582), which would more than double the federal minimum wage to $15 per hour. While the U.S. Chamber of Commerce is willing to work with members of Congress to develop a legislative package that includes an increase guided by economic conditions, $15 per hour is not that number, and the Raise the Wage Act is not that legislation.  We urge the House to oppose the Raise the Wage Act and we stand ready to work together to develop a reasonable approach to increasing the minimum wage.

As a new Congressional Budget Office (CBO) report states, the dramatic increase of the federal minimum wage from $7.25 per hour to $15 per hour would have disruptive impacts on employers, particularly small businesses, as well as negative effects on the job opportunities for first time and lower skilled workers.  The report stated that, when fully implemented, a $15 per hour minimum wage could result in as many as 3.7 million workers losing jobs and total real family income dropping by $9 billion.

Additionally, the Raise the Wage Act includes other provisions about which the Chamber has serious concerns, such as indexing the minimum wage to inflation and eliminating the credit for tipped employees.  The latter proposal would likely reduce take home pay for many tipped employees, which is why the District of Columbia City Council recently invalidated a proposal to eliminate its tip credit.

While the CBO report found that an increase to a $15 per hour minimum wage was too drastic, the same report stated that a more moderate, economically-based increase would create minimal economic disruption.  For example, the report indicated that an increase to around $10 per hour would raise the wages for as many 3.5 million workers (based on the median estimate) and would result in few, if any, job losses.

Finally, if the minimum wage is increased to a double-digit number as part of a balanced legislative package that includes provisions that also help employers, both employees and employers would benefit.  For example, a minimum wage increase could be paired with reforms to help employers manage higher labor costs through updates to the FLSA.  Among the reforms the Chamber would like to see are…

You May Also Like

The Big Lie: Colorado ‘Right to Repair’ Advocates Distort Facts to Pass Nation’s ‘First’ Law   

Sacramento For Tractors’ Barb Adams Passes at 74

Driverless Tractors Stoke ‘Fear Mongering’ at Cal/OSHA

FWEDA 2022 President’s Award Recipient – Mark Berchtold