There’s Oregon Precedent for a Big Minimum Wage Increase

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There’s Oregon Precedent for a Big Minimum Wage Increase

InsideCapitolDome

There’s Oregon Precedent for a Big Minimum Wage Increase

If the Oregon legislature raises the minimum wage to $15 per hour by 2018 in three steps, as proposed by HB 2009, it would not be the first time lawmakers enact a substantial minimum wage increase.

In 1989, Oregon lawmakers raised the minimum wage, which then stood at $3.35. The result: By January 1, 1991, Oregon’s minimum wage was $4.75. That’s a 42 percent increase over two years. Oregon’s economy did well following the increase. That’s not to suggest causality, but rather to note that a substantial minimum wage increase can go hand-in-hand with solid economic growth.

In 1950, the federal minimum wage — which set the floor in Oregon at the time — jumped 88 percent, thanks to congressional action.

How do these historical increases from Congress and the Oregon legislature compare to the increase proposed in House Bill 2009?

Over the first two years of implementing HB 2009’s phased increase, the minimum wage would rise 43 percent. When fully implemented on January 1, 2018, Oregon’s minimum wage would be 62 percent higher than it is today.

Too many working Oregonians are struggling to make ends meet. There’s precedent to raise the minimum wage to $15 by 2018.


This post was originally published on www.blueoregon.com on February 20, 2015. The original post can be found at http://www.blueoregon.com/2015/02/oregon-precedent-big-minimum-wage-increases/ .

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OCPP

Written by staff at the Oregon Center for Public Policy.
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Chuck Sheketoff

Chuck Sheketoff is a founder of the Oregon Center for Public Policy and former Executive Director. Incorporated in 1995, the Center was launched with Chuck as its first executive director after Chuck received the "public interest pioneer award" from the Stern Family Fund in September, 1997. Prior to starting the Center, Chuck lobbied the Oregon legislature on tax policies and on human services programs' policies and budgets on behalf of legal aid clients (1992 to 1996) and the low-income clients of the Oregon Law Center (1997).

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