Chuck Schumer. If We Pass Trump's Big, Beautiful Bill, Everyone Is Going to...
Is Joe Biden Really Trying to Sell This Line? Also, Who Wrote This?
The Courts Are Courting Disaster by Alienating Conservatives
The Reactions to Karine Jean-Pierre's Book Were Pure Gold
Glove Are Off: Trump Orders DOJ to Investigate Biden Health Cover-Up
Are People Getting Dumber?
Three Little Words
5th Anniversary of the Death of George Floyd -- The Damage Continues, Part...
Team Trump Ends the USNS Harvey Milk
Urgent Need for Red Flag
Trump's Agenda Versus His Opponents'
Harvard Is the Enemy
Great New Film – 'The American Miracle'
Senator John Cornyn’s Pro-Taxpayer Idea
Confirm Emil Bove to the Federal Bench
Tipsheet

Minimum Wage Increase Puts 1,400 D.C. Restaurant Employees Out of Work

D.C. restaurants have lost 1,400 jobs in the first half of the year. This loss—the steepest drop since the 2001 recession—follows a significant minimum wage hike.

Advertisement

Data  suggests that the D.C. restaurant industry has been unable to absorb the higher cost of labor without reducing employment opportunities. Since mandating a base wage of $10.50 in July 2015 and another increase to $11.50 in July 2016, D.C. has seen employment in the restaurant industry trend downward, for a 3 percent job loss in 2016.

“Cities and states around the country that are considering a hike in their minimum wages to $15 an hour might want to take a look at how that’s working out in the nation’s capitol,” writes Mark Perry of the American Enterprise Institute.

While D.C. has not yet increased its minimum wage to $15, the wage hikes it has implemented have put it well on that path. And, according Perry, even these more modest increases have had negative effects.

Using the neighboring suburbs in Maryland and Virginia as a “natural experiment,” Perry compared the employment rates in D.C., where the minimum wage had been raised, to the rates in states with lower minimum wages—$8.75 and $7.25 respectively.

Advertisement

He found that these suburbs actually saw an increase in hiring during the same period that D.C. experienced 3 percent job loss. Restaurant employment grew at a 1.6 percent rate for an additional 2,900 jobs.

Despite this troubling comparison, D.C. officials have no plans to reduce the city’s minimum wage. On the contrary, they have added a measure to November’s ballot to increase its minimum wage even further—$15 an hour for non-tipped employees and $5 an hour for tipped.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement