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  • JESSICA DESVARIEUX: Last week, President Obama kept his word and signed an executive order

  • raising the minimum wage for new federal contracts. The order requires contractors to pay employees

  • at least $10.10 an hour. At the signing, the president did not miss the opportunity to

  • call Congress to do the same nationwide.

  • BARACK OBAMA: There's a right now in front of both the House and the Senate that would

  • boost America's minimum wage to $10.10 an hour--just like I'm doing with this executive

  • action. It's easy to remember: 10-10--10-10. Let's get that done. Raise the federal minimum

  • wage to $10.10 wouldn't just raise wages for minimum-wage workers, its effect would lift

  • wages for about 28 million Americans. It would lift millions of Americans out of poverty

  • immediately. It would help millions more work their way out of poverty--without requiring

  • a single dollar in new taxes or spending.

  • DESVARIEUX: But in this picture-perfect moment, you can see in the background a group of low-wage

  • workers. One of them is Arthur Helms. As a Wendy's employee making about $9 an hour,

  • Arthur's been on the front lines fighting for a higher wage before it became a talking

  • point on Capitol Hill. He says this raise is a jump-start but not the finish line.

  • ARTHUR HELMS: Actually, I don't think $10 will get you out of poverty. I don't think

  • $12 will get you out of poverty. I mean, $15 can be a better start. You know. But the $10,

  • it's a jump-start.

  • DESVARIEUX: A jump-start is how many in the wage movement are framing the news, especially

  • in light of major corporations, like the Gap, announcing that they will be raising their

  • minimum wage to $10 an hour next year.

  • But if you factor in the $8.7 billion in cuts to food stamps, would raising the minimum

  • wage to $10 an hour get a working parent out of poverty?

  • The Real News sat down and did the math with Cheria Cash. She's a 31-year-old single mother

  • who was hired full-time at McDonald's and on food stamps.

  • CHERIA CASH: I work at McDonald's in Pittsburg, P.A., and that's on the north side. And they

  • pay me $7.70.

  • DESVARIEUX: Making $7.70 an hour, Cheria says that she usually only gets 30 hours of work

  • a week. That comes out to $231 of gross weekly income. After she pays Social Security, taxes,

  • and Medicare, she says that she only takes home $380 every two weeks, or about $820 a

  • month, if she works the full 52 weeks a year. She also has a teenage son and receives $326

  • a month in food stamps.

  • Before she receives her earned income tax credit, her monthly income and food stamp

  • benefits total $1,149.

  • CASH: When you think about it, it's like, gosh, it costs more to get to work this week,

  • and I didn't even make that much. You know? Like, I spend my whole check to get back and

  • forth to work or to eat. You know? So it's not even about going out or anything like

  • that. It's just basically surviving, you know?

  • DESVARIEUX: Now let's see how she survives with earning $10.10 an hour. Her weekly gross

  • income would get boosted up to $303 a week. Her monthly income would jump to $1,076. With

  • the same food stamp benefits of $326 a month, and not including the couple of thousands

  • for earned income tax credit, Cheria would have $1,402 a month to live on.

  • Fortunately for Cheria, she is not one of the 850,000 households who will see an average

  • cut of about $90 a month to their benefits. That's according to the nonpartisan Congressional

  • Budget Office, since she does not receive heating assistance.

  • But after looking at both situations, we asked an economic analyst if Cheria has made it

  • out of poverty by earning $10 an hour?

  • DAVID COOPER: For a parent with one child, the federal poverty line is about $15,700.

  • So right now she's definitely below the poverty line. If the federal minimum wage went up

  • to $10.10, her income would go up significantly. Her pre-tax income annually would probably

  • be right around that $15,700 mark. So she'd probably be just above the poverty line or

  • right near it.

  • DESVARIEUX: But though Cheria seems to squeak right above the poverty line, David Cooper

  • says that the federal poverty line is not the most accurate measure of the reality of

  • today's cost of living.

  • COOPER: The poverty line was developed in the late 1950s. And what they did at that

  • time is they basically said, well, what does it cost to buy sort of your basic essential

  • bundle of food? And people tend to spend about three times more than that in total on everything

  • else that they're buying. So we'll set the poverty line at basically three times the

  • cost of what it takes to buy food. Now this is food in the 1950s, and since then, you

  • know, the prices on things like health care and housing in particular have gone up a lot

  • faster than the price of food, but we've only adjusted the poverty line based on overall

  • inflation. So that means that today's poverty line is really not a very accurate measure

  • of what it actually takes for someone to live.

  • DESVARIEUX: To account for people's actual living costs, EPI devised a tool called the

  • Family Budget Calculator. We decided to try it out based on Cheria's family size and the

  • fact that she lives in the city of Pittsburg.

  • COOPER: For one parent and one child, we estimate it takes an annual income of about $48,000

  • to have a modest but secure standard of living. Right now she has an income of about $12,000-$13,000

  • total.

  • DESVARIEUX: It's discrepancies like this one that have led to broad public support for

  • raising the minimum wage. According to a Quinnipiac poll last month, 71 percent of American voters

  • support raising the minimum wage.

  • But Republicans are ready to fight back the $10 wage, especially considering the recent

  • report from the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office.

  • The report states that the $10 an hour wage hike would get 900,000 families out of poverty

  • and increase the incomes of 16.5 million low-wage workers in an average week.

  • But the wage hike could also cause the economy to lose half a million jobs.

  • DOUG ELMENDORF: The set of research studies in this area led us to conclude that an increase

  • in the minimum wage would probably have a small negative effect on employment, but there

  • was substantial uncertainty around that estimate, as we reported.

  • DESVARIEUX: The CBO's uncertainty is what Howard University economics professor William

  • Spriggs points to as one of the weaknesses of the report.

  • WILLIAM SPRIGGS: They cited many, many reviews of the literature on minimum wage, all of

  • which show either no loss of jobs, small gains in jobs, or very tiny losses of jobs. And

  • for them to have chosen a very sensitive reaction to the increase in the minimum wage just doesn't

  • line up with the studies that they cite. So I'm taking their 500,000 with a huge grain

  • of salt. For me, that's beyond the worst-case scenario. I would only give that a 2 percent

  • chance of happening.

  • DESVARIEUX: Professor Spriggs says that raising the minimum wage would lift millions out of

  • poverty. But it wouldn't get all full-time workers out of poverty. Therefore, he says,

  • the minimum wage should really be pegged to productivity and start at $15 an hour.

  • SPRIGGS: We really need it to be $15. The reason we need it to be $15 is the bigger

  • picture here, is that wages for all workers have been stagnant if not falling back, even

  • for skilled workers and the most skilled workers.

  • So take electricians as an example. They don't face imports, 'cause if you're hiring an electrician,

  • you can't import one, and they rarely face competition from people who migrate to this

  • country. But even the top 10 percent, the very highest paid electricians, have seen

  • their wages go backwards this last decade.

  • So even skilled workers in the United States are seeing their wages slide backwards. They

  • aren't keeping up with productivity.

  • And we know that the gap is over 30 percent between where wages and productivity were

  • in the late 1970s and where they are today. So if we had kept the minimum wage constant

  • with productivity increases, then the minimum wage, if you had kept it from the 1970s to

  • today, 1968 to today, the minimum wage would be somewhere close to $20 an hour.

  • The $15 an hour says, okay, very low wage workers aren't as productive as is the average

  • for the economy, so we think that they've only got about half as productive. They would

  • get $15 an hour.

  • And it's that gap between wages, between what people take home and what they're producing

  • for companies, that is creating the underlying problem that we have in our economy, because

  • if you can't make enough money to buy what you just made, it means I don't need you,

  • 'cause I can't sell what you just made. So it's kind of common sense. It's what Henry

  • Ford said. You know, I can have these really productive autoworkers on this line and I

  • can make thousands of cars, but if nobody can buy the car, what does that mean? So I

  • got to pay somebody so they can buy the cars. Same thing is true today. And we've walked

  • away from the relationship between productivity and wages.

  • Productivity is up. Wages are not. Gaining the minimum wage to $15 and then linking it

  • to productivity would mean that we would have a way to restore the relationship between

  • wages and productivity.

  • DESVARIEUX: Workers like Cheria in the Fight for 15 say $15 an hour would allow them to

  • invest in the future.

  • CASH: If you give us $15, I know I'll be able to buy a pair of shoes more than once a year.

  • I won't have to wait for my income tax money to buy stuff. I could actually save my income

  • tax money and put that towards, like, my son's education.

  • DESVARIEUX: Hopes for a $15 wage may seem farfetched, as Congress cannot settle on a

  • $10 wage increase. But Democratic Senate majority leader Harry Reid says he will bring the minimum

  • wage $10.10 bill to the Senate floor for a vote next month.

  • Congress may attempt to compromise, considering the CBO's companion analysis of a $9 minimum

  • wage.

  • But considering $10 will barely get Cheria above the federal poverty line, $9 will certainly

  • have her coming up short--again.

  • For The Real News Network, Jessica Desvarieux, Washington.

JESSICA DESVARIEUX: Last week, President Obama kept his word and signed an executive order

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