“Fair wages are part of the formula for success”
By Jon
Cooper American Forum
As
a business owner who runs a manufacturing company with 150 employees, I
strongly support increasing the federal minimum wage, which has been stuck at
just $7.25 an hour since July 24, 2009. It will provide concrete benefits to
businesses and will strengthen our overall economy.
Fair
wages are part of the formula for success at my company, Spectronics
Corporation, the world's leading manufacturer of ultraviolet equipment and
fluorescent materials. Raising the minimum wage will help America succeed as
well.
Consumer
spending drives about 70 percent of our nation's economy. And wages drive
consumer spending.
The single biggest problem faced by small businesses today is weak consumer demand. Increasing the minimum wage is a great way to spur economic growth by jump-starting consumer spending. It will allow workers to buy essentials they can't afford now, and most of the money they spend will go right back into local businesses.
That's
also good for our tax base.
A
higher minimum wage will also result in lower employee turnover. Turnover costs
money, and reducing turnover means lower costs for hiring and training new
workers. In addition, higher wages bring increased productivity. Employers who
invest in their workforce have employees who are more invested in the company
and in satisfying its customers.
At
my company, nearly 71 percent of employees have been with us for over 10 years.
Compare that to low-paying chains with continual turnover or the local retail
store where one of my daughters worked for a year.
She and many of her
co-workers were paid minimum wage, and she saw that the biggest problem they
faced was high turnover. Much time and effort was spent training the constant
flow of new employees, which adversely impacted customer service since they
made more mistakes due to their inexperience.
Raising
the minimum wage encourages better business practices. An inadequate minimum
wage fits the old adage, "Penny wise and pound foolish."
Fortunately,
most business owners are already paying employees more than minimum wage. Those
companies that do pay their workers poverty wages at or near $7.25 are in
effect being subsidized by other businesses and taxpayers, since low-wage
employees are far more likely to turn to government assistance programs to get
by. That's simply not fair.
Companies
like mine, Costco and In N Out Burger, for example, which thrive with fair
wages, show every day that companies like WalMart and McDonald's are choosing
to take advantage of the low minimum wage and shortchange their workers -- and
our nation.
Whenever
we talk about raising the minimum wage, critics claim that it will cause
increased unemployment. But this has been carefully refuted in an extensive
series of studies of the impact of actual minimum wage increases.
For example, a study by the Institute for Research on Labor and Employment published in The Review of Economics and Statistics, November 2010, compared every pair of neighboring U.S. counties that had differing minimum wage levels at any time between 1990 and 2006. It found no adverse employment effects from higher minimum wages.
For example, a study by the Institute for Research on Labor and Employment published in The Review of Economics and Statistics, November 2010, compared every pair of neighboring U.S. counties that had differing minimum wage levels at any time between 1990 and 2006. It found no adverse employment effects from higher minimum wages.
The
$7.25 minimum wage comes to just $15,080 a year for full-time workers. That's
too low to live on and it’s undermining our economy.
If
the minimum wage had been automatically adjusted for the cost of living since
the 1960s, businesses would be paying $10.74 today. The Fair Minimum Wage Act
would gradually increase the minimum wage to $10.10 over three years, and then
adjust it annually for inflation. These provisions are fair and reasonable.
Employers
who pretend they cannot pay a minimum wage equivalent to what their
counterparts paid in the 1960s should be ashamed of themselves.
Raising
the minimum wage is an overdue investment in our economy.
Cooper
is the owner and president of Spectronics Corporation, based in Westbury, New
York. He is also a member of Business for a Fair Minimum Wage.