The Raise the Wage Act would eliminate decades of growing wage inequality between the lowest-paid and the typical U.S. worker: Federal minimum wage as a share of the national full-time, full-year median wage, 1968–2018 (actual) and 2019–2024 (projected under the Raise the Wage Act of 2019 for two scenarios)

Year Historical share Projected share, no real wage growth Projected share, 0.5% real wage growth
1968 52.8%
1969 48.9%
1970 46.1%
1971 44.4%
1972 42.1%
1973 38.7%
1974 44.6%
1975 43.8%
1976 44.8%
1977 42.4%
1978 45.8%
1979 45.7%
1980 44.5%
1981 44.5%
1982 41.9%
1983 40.2%
1984 38.2%
1985 36.4%
1986 35.5%
1987 35.0%
1988 33.5%
1989 32.0%
1990 35.2%
1991 37.9%
1992 36.6%
1993 36.1%
1994 35.4%
1995 35.2%
1996 38.0%
1997 39.2%
1998 37.7%
1999 35.9%
2000 35.4%
2001 33.8%
2002 33.1%
2003 32.3%
2004 31.5%
2005 30.9%
2006 30.4%
2007 33.0%
2008 35.2%
2009 37.8%
2010 37.7%
2011 37.6%
2012 37.5%
2013 37.4%
2014 36.4%
2015 35.2%
2016 33.9%
2017 33.3% 33.3% 33.3%
2018 32.4% 32.4% 
2019 37.4% 37.2%
2020 42.0% 41.6%
2021 46.4% 45.7%
2022 50.5% 49.6%
2023 54.5% 53.2%
2024 58.0% 56.4% 

Notes: Inflation measured using the CPI-U-RS and CBO CPI-U projections. Projected median real wage growth assumes either none or 0.5% annual.

Source: EPI analysis of the Fair Labor Standards Act and amendments, the Raise the Wage Act of 2019, and Current Population Survey (CPS) Annual Social and Economic Supplement microdata

View the underlying data on epi.org.