Economic Policy Institute
EPI home
EPI home
Search
Navigation tips
Bookstore
Publications archive
Newsroom
Calendar
About EPI
Economists
Contact EPI
Web features
Job postings
Sign up
Support EPI
WEB FEATURES
Datazone
Economic Indicators
Issue Guides
Online calculators
Snapshots
Viewpoints
Audio/video archive

BROWSE OTHER ARTICLES BY
Liana Fox


RELATED PUBLICATIONS
What a new federal minimum wage means for the states

Minimum wage: Still waiting on a raise

Tax Credits or Minimum Wages? We Need Both

A fish is not a fowl: Tax credits and the minimum wage

Minimum wage, maximum pork


Email this pageEmail this page

Print this pagePrint this page    Email this pageEmail this page



Snapshots


A weekly presentation of downloadable charts and short analyses designed to graphically illustrate important economic issues. Updated every Wednesday. [See Snapshots Archive.]

Snapshot for February 17, 2006.

Inequality widens as real value of minimum wage falls
As a recent Economic Policy Institute and Center on Budget and Policy Priorities report details, the incomes of the rich have skyrocketed over the past 20 years, while the rest of America has experienced only marginal gains.  The divide between middle- and low-wage workers has also increased. 

One way the United States addresses inequality is through the federal minimum wage.  In 2005, minimum wage workers earned only 32% of the average hourly wage.  Barring a minimum wage increase, we are poised to break a record in 2006 for the greatest inequality between minimum wage and average wage workers since the end of World War II. 

As shown in the Figure below, the minimum wage reached a peak of 56% of the average wage in 1950 and remained near 50% throughout the 1950s and 1960s.  The decline in the minimum wage relative to the average wage since 1969 has resulted from continuous increases in average wages while Congress has raised the minimum wage only modestly and sporadically.  In January 2006, the average hourly wage was $16.41.  To reach 50% of the average wage—the level experienced in the 1950s and 1960s—the minimum wage (currently at $5.15) would need to be raised to $8.20.

The minimum wage relative to the average hourly wage, 1947-2005

The federal minimum wage needs to be increased to improve the relative purchasing power of low-wage workers.  In addition, once the minimum wage has been raised to a reasonable level, it should be annually adjusted to prevent future erosion.  These measures would help curb rising inequality in the United States and provide a more adequate floor for low-wage workers.

For more minimum wage facts, see EPI's Minimum Wage Issue Guide.

This week's Snapshot was written by EPI policy analyst Liana Fox.

Check out the archive for past Economic Snapshots.



Did you find this publication helpful? Support EPI's work today!

Copyright © 2008 by The Economic Policy Institute. All rights reserved.

Readers may redistribute this material to other individuals for noncommercial use, provided that the text, data, and all HTML code remain intact and unaltered in any way. This article may not be resold, reprinted, or redistributed for compensation of any kind without prior written permission. If you have any questions about permissions, please contact EPI at publications@epi.org. Other questions or concerns about this Web site can be directed to webmaster@epi.org.

EPI home