Wondering what the livable wage is in your area? Use the Economic Policy Institute’s budget calculator here.
NBC 12 News
February 9, 2021
According to an analysis of the report by Elise Gould, senior economist at the Economic Policy Institute (EPI), the BLS Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey (JOLTS) for December provides a “clear sign that recovery is not charging ahead.”
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The phrase “little changed” is mentioned 17 times throughout the survey, Gould noted in a tweet, illuminating the point that that job market has seen weak recovery for millions of unemployed Americans.
“Along most of the [BLS] measures, we are not seeing improvements,” Gould told Newsweek. “Hopes for recovering, that’s not what’s happening now.”
Newsweek
February 9, 2021
A Feb. 2 report on Biden’s proposal by think tank Economic Policy Institute said that raising the minimum wage to $15 an hour would raise Federal Insurance Contributions Act
taxes each year by $7 billion to $13.9 billion. Employees pay half of those taxes and employers pay the other half.
Law360
February 9, 2021
Left-leaning economists disputed the CBO’s findings. Ben Zipperer, of the Economic Policy Institute, said the CBO’s job-loss estimate is more than double the median found in a wide body of research.
Bloomberg
February 9, 2021
The left-leaning Economic Policy Institute took issue with the CBO’s projection of significant job loss, saying its own analysis has found the impact on employment to be negligible. “We believe that the CBO’s assumptions on the scale of job-loss are just wrong and inappropriately inflated relative to what cutting-edge economics literature would indicate,” EPI stated.
CBS News
February 9, 2021
The Economic Policy Institute, the labor-backed think tank, has studied the impact of raising the wage to $15 in every congressional district as a way of demonstrating the boon that it would mean for many workers. And the institute’s data indicates that many workers would benefit.
Roll Call
February 9, 2021
In his attempt to overcome the Byrd rule, Sanders has cited new studies from two sources with a history of highly partisan research in support of minimum-wage hikes. Authored by the Economic Policy Institute and Berkeley economist Michael Reich these studies claim that a $15 federal minimum wage would positively impact the federal budget by tens of billions of dollars per year through increased tax revenue and reduced costs for public-assistance programs. Reich claims hiking the minimum wage to $15 an hour by 2025 would positively impact the federal budget to the tune of $65.4 billion a year.
The National Review
February 9, 2021
In a brief, researchers at the left-leaning Economic Policy Institute noted potential upsides for workers the CBO report highlights. They pointed out that the estimates show the policy would benefit 27 million workers and increase wages by $333 billion between 2021 and 2031, with much of the added income flowing to lower earners.
The $333 billion figure is based on estimates that the policy would result in $509 billion of higher hourly pay, which would be offset by $175 billion in wage losses due to fewer jobs.
EPI’s experts disagreed with CBO’s estimates on how the wage policy could hurt employment. “We believe that the CBO’s assumptions on the scale of job-loss are just wrong and inappropriately inflated relative to what cutting-edge economics literature would indicate,” they wrote.
Route Fifty
February 9, 2021
Increasing minimum pay levels “would disproportionately raise the incomes of families at the bottom of the income distribution and would meaningfully reduce the number of families in poverty,” the Economic Policy Institute said in a recent paper.
CNBC
February 9, 2021