The Center for American Progress reports:
Think a higher minimum wage is a job killer? Think again: The states that raised their minimum wages on January 1 have seen higher employment growth since then than the states that kept theirs at the same rate.
The minimum wage went up in 13 states Arizona, Connecticut, Colorado, Florida, Missouri, Montana, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, and Washington either thanks to automatic increases in line with inflation or new legislation, as Ben Wolcott reports in his analysis at the Center for Economic and Policy Research. The average change in employment for those states over the first five months of the year as compared with the last five of 2013 is 0.99 percent, while the average for all remaining states is 0.68 percent.
Digging deeper, all but one of those states are experiencing increases in employment, and nine of them have seen growth above the median rate.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday July 05 2014, @08:14AM
Are you really so stupid to claim someone was cherry-picking data, when your own cherry-picked data showed a much bigger change? It's obvious to anyone with half a brain that if he was cherry-picking he would have chosen your numbers.
With that out of the way, your further data just proves the point more that people are today historically underpaid compared with previous generations.All the gains of productivity etc have gone to those at the top, but it wasn't enough.They still had to scrape more from the poorest working people to build their even bigger yachts.Rich people have no intention of helping the poor make a decent living, the government has to step in and fix the problem.