40% Of US Workers Now Earn Less Than 1968 Minimum Wage - Sound Money Institute
Are American workers paid enough? That is a topic
that is endlessly debated all across this great land of ours.
Unfortunately, what pretty much everyone can agree on is that American
workers are not making as much as they used to after you account for
inflation. Back in 1968, the minimum wage in the United States was
$1.60 an hour. That sounds very small, but after you account for
inflation a very different picture emerges. Using the inflation calculator that the Bureau of Labor Statistics provides, $1.60 in 1968 is equivalent to $10.74 today.
And of course the official government inflation numbers have been heavily manipulated to
make inflation look much lower than it actually is, so the number for
today should actually be substantially higher than $10.74, but for
purposes of this article we will use $10.74. If you were to work a
full-time job at $10.74 an hour for a full year (with two weeks off for
vacation), you would make about $21,480 for the year.
That isn’t a lot of money, but according to the Social Security Administration, 40.28% of
all workers make less than $20,000 a year in America today. So that
means that more than 40 percent of all U.S. workers actually make less
than what a full-time minimum wage worker made back in 1968. That is
how far we have fallen.
No comments:
Post a Comment