> but, practically, when you increase the minimum wage, the poverty jobs will disappear
If we're talking about raising the minimum wage arbitrarily high, then this is true.
But this argument also gets made a lot when we're talking about a specific proposal (such as $15). For a specific proposal this argument is not always true.
It was raised a ton in Seattle when Seattle was considering a $15 minimum wage. Endlessly. The main argument was that it would devastate employment for the jobs it was supposed to improve.
Then the minimum wage increase passed and it didn't do that. Employment in those jobs actually went up slightly (probably not a casual increase, probably more coincidental). But it certainly didn't devastate the employment in minimum wage jobs.
So, the argument is one that feels compelling since it is true in the extremes. But it needs to be evaluated with the facts of each proposal.
If we're talking about raising the minimum wage arbitrarily high, then this is true.
But this argument also gets made a lot when we're talking about a specific proposal (such as $15). For a specific proposal this argument is not always true.
It was raised a ton in Seattle when Seattle was considering a $15 minimum wage. Endlessly. The main argument was that it would devastate employment for the jobs it was supposed to improve.
Then the minimum wage increase passed and it didn't do that. Employment in those jobs actually went up slightly (probably not a casual increase, probably more coincidental). But it certainly didn't devastate the employment in minimum wage jobs.
So, the argument is one that feels compelling since it is true in the extremes. But it needs to be evaluated with the facts of each proposal.