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News from EPI New EPI proposal would raise the federal minimum wage and lift pay for nearly 40 million workers

EPI and the Roosevelt Institute will host a webinar today at 1 p.m. ET on a new way to think about the minimum wage. Register here.

A new Economic Policy Institute report proposes tying the federal minimum wage to two-thirds of the national median wage, an evidence-backed benchmark that would deliver meaningful pay increases to the largest number of workers without the job losses critics typically predict. A complementary report also released today from the Roosevelt Institute—a think tank and professional network working to balance power in the economy—provides evidence for this higher wage rate and argues that greater worker protections, including universal just-cause protections and stronger enforcement against wage theft, are foundational to families’ economic security. 

The federal minimum wagefrozen at $7.25 since 2009is at its lowest real value in 77 years, having lost 30% of its purchasing power over the 17-year freeze, according to EPI’s report. Setting the minimum wage at two-thirds of the median—equivalent to roughly $17.70 today and a projected $20 in 2030—would lift pay for nearly 40 million workers in 2030, about a quarter of the workforce. It would also durably narrow the gap between low-wage workers and the typical worker, with Black workers and women seeing the largest benefits. Indexing the federal minimum wage to median wage growth–which typically outpaces price growth–would lock in these gains, preventing the kind of decades-long slide that has eroded the current floor.

The two-thirds benchmark is also well-supported by economic research. Decades of studies show that minimum wage increases up to two-thirds of the median wage deliver meaningful pay increases and do not result in the kind of job loss critics of a higher minimum wage predict.

EPI’s proposal would eliminate poverty wages and move the federal minimum wage meaningfully toward a living wage in much of the country. Under EPI’s Family Budget Calculator thresholds, a single adult working full time at the proposed wage could cover the expenses of a modest but adequate standard of living in half of U.S. counties, a substantial step toward economic security for tens of millions of low-wage workers.

But in higher-cost states and localities, state and local policymakers can and should set even higher minimum wages to reduce even wider gaps between pay and the cost of an adequate standard of living. And even a strong federal floor cannot, on its own, guarantee economic security: Lifting working families requires a broader agenda of strengthening unions, expanding the safety net, and keeping unemployment low.

“The woefully inadequate federal minimum wage is a major driver of the affordability crisis facing low-wage workers. Meaningfully raising the federal minimum wage and indexing it to median wage growth is the single most direct step Congress can take to lift pay for U.S. workers and their families,” said Ben Zipperer, EPI senior economist and author of the report. 

“A stronger federal minimum wage is needed to put workers within reach of a living wage,” said Patrick Oakford, director of worker power and economic security at the Roosevelt Institute. “But a minimum wage alone won’t provide the foundation workers need to build meaningful economic security. We need common-sense employment policies to address persistent income inequality and limit corporate power, including universal just-cause protections for all employees.”