It’s been 12 years since the last federal minimum wage increase. Where efforts to raise the pay rate stand

It’s been 12 years since the last federal minimum wage increase. Where efforts to raise the pay rate stand

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A restaurant worker at a May 26, 2021 “Wage Strike" demonstration organized by One Fair Wage in Washington, D.C. Anna Moneymaker | Getty Images News | Getty Images The coronavirus


crisis has cast new attention on wages and income. It's been 12 years since the last federal minimum wage increase, and whether a hike in minimum pay will get passed by Congress or not


is still a question. The federal minimum wage is currently $7.25 per hour. That pay raise was approved by Congress in 2007, which gradually kicked it up to the present number in 2009. For


many workers trying to get by, that is a problem. MORE FROM PERSONAL FINANCE: The $7.25 minimum wage can't pay all the bills in any state What Delaware's move to a higher minimum


wage could mean Delta variant may be reason to extend unemployment pay "The minimum wage is far lower than it was at its peak over 50 years ago in 1968," said economist Lawrence


Mishel, distinguished fellow at the Economic Policy Institute, which tracks minimum wage changes. That's even as the productivity and efficiency of workers has more than doubled, he


said. "The failure to increase the minimum wage has really undercut the wages of the bottom third of the work force," Mishel said. A fight earlier this year to increase the federal


minimum wage to $15 per hour was unsuccessful. One reason why: That change was prohibited during the so-called reconciliation process. Consequently, a push by some lawmakers for a wage rate


hike was not included. Even as some Americans clamor for more stimulus checks, others ask: Why can't we have a higher minimum wage instead? CONGRESSIONAL OUTLOOK UNCERTAIN "It


certainly remains on the Democrats' agenda," Shai Akabas, director of economic policy at the Bipartisan Policy Center, said of efforts to raise the minimum wage on Capitol Hill.


However, it does not look like a near-term goal, he said. "It seems unlikely that that will happen in the next several months," Akabas said. One reason is Democrats are again


talking about pushing their next package through using the reconciliation process. As such, a higher federal minimum wage would not qualify for inclusion. > Democrats did not get their 


minimum wage legislatively, but ... $15 > per hour signs are in business after business window. >  > Ed Mills > Washington policy analyst at Raymond James But while the fight for


a higher federal minimum wage on Capitol Hill seems to have died for now, it has ignited consumer demand that is prompting an upward push in wages, said Ed Mills, Washington policy analyst


at Raymond James. "Democrats did not get their minimum wage legislatively, but they created market conditions that in many parts of this country, $15 per hour signs are in business


after business window," Mills said. "Wages went to $15 per hour faster than they would have if it was done legislatively," Mills said. SOME COMPANIES, STATES MOVE TOWARD


HIGHER PAY Certain companies have made headlines for their hourly wage goals. That includes Bank of America, which has said it plans to hike its minimum wage to $25 per hour by 2025, and


retailers like Amazon and Target, which have promised to pay their workers $15 per hour. Meanwhile, states are stepping in to raise their minimum pay rates. However, none of them currently


have a $15 per hour wage in place, though states like Florida are working to gradually move toward that by 2026. Currently, only four states have minimum wages greater or equal to $12.50 per


hour, according to Business for a Fair Minimum Wage, which is campaigning for higher wages. They include California, Massachusetts, New York and Washington. Meanwhile, 20 states have wages


no higher than the $7.25 federal minimum wage. Notably, President Joe Biden has moved to increase the federal minimum wage for federal contractors to $15 per hour. One problem with waiting


to address low hourly wages is rising inflation, according to Mishel. "Inflation has already undercut the minimum wage quite a lot," he said. One argument against raising the


hourly pay rate is that it could adversely businesses and employment. But there is little evidence to support those claims, Mishel said. "There may be some firms that close, but others


open up, too," he said. "One can ask, if a firm can only survive with substandard wages, is that a good outcome?"