Most Americans Favor Raising the Minimum Wage, Unless it Costs Something


Gallup finds
that three-fourths of Americans favor raising the
federal minimum wage to $9 an hour, whereas 22 percent oppose such
a proposal. This is similar to what the Reason-Rupe poll
found
earlier this year; however, support flips and 56 percent
oppose if it caused employers to lay off workers. All policies come
with a price and polling questions constantly phrased as
benefits-only propositions will continue to overestimate support.
Instead, questions should measure what Americans would be willing
to give up in order to raise the federal minimum wage.

This month New Jersey voters
approved
raising their state’s minimum wage from $7.25 to $8.25
an hour by a margin of 61% to 39%. Two-thirds of the California
state
legislature also voted
to increase the state’s minimum wage to
$10 an hour by 2016. In light of these numbers, Gallup’s results
suggest that national popular support is even higher.

However, simply asking if Americans favor or oppose a minimum
wage increase suggest to survey respondents there are no costs
associated with such a proposal. For those who haven’t thought much
about the issue, it’s like asking if they want people to be paid
more or less—not surprisingly they say more.

Instead, a Reason-Rupe
poll
delved deeper to understand how Americans make trade offs.
First, it found a similar number to Gallup, that roughly 7 in 10
Americans support raising the minimum wage to $9 an hour assuming
no costs. But a follow up question reveals that support plummets to
37 percent if doing so caused “some employers to lay off workers,”
and opposition raises to 56 percent.

The key is determining whether Americans actually believe
raising the minimum wage will shrink the number of jobs in the
economy. Reason-Rupe found 42 percent believe raising the minimum
wage will reduce the number of jobs and 41 percent say it will have
no impact. Thirteen percent actually thought it would increase the
number of jobs.

Looking at the data’s crosstabs, 58 percent of Americans who
believe raising the minimum wage will lead to fewer jobs in the
economy oppose the proposal. In contrast 88 percent of
Americans who believe raising the minimum wage to $9 would have no
impact on jobs favor raising the federal minimum
wage. In other words, Americans who don’t associate job costs with
raising the minimum wage find little reason to oppose the proposal;
those who expect a trade-off are less supportive.

These data suggest Americans’ support for increasing the minimum
wage is in large part contingent upon whether such a proposal would
in fact actually impact jobs in the economy.  

Moreover, rather than poll questions essentially asking
respondents if they favor or oppose their fellow Americans making
more money, questions should be designed to measure what Americans
would be willing to give up to raise minimum wage floors.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/12/most-americans-favor-raising-the-minimum
via IFTTT

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *