California’s $20 Minimum Wage Goes into Effect Next Month: Economic Impact, Corruption, and Moral Considerations

4 minread time | March 6, 2024read time |

California Governor Gavin Newsom signed two controversial bills last year, which raise the minimum wage for fast food workers to $20 per hour, effective April of this year (up from $16 currently), and which raise the minimum wage for workers in the healthcare industry to $18, $21, or $23 per hour in June (this includes support staff, such as maintenance workers, hospital gift shop employees, etc.)

While these new developments naturally affect Californians first and foremost, there are implications for the rest of the country as well. California is politically and economically influential, and often, the laws that pass in CA are not far behind in other states. Beyond this, California supplies an impressive amount of the food, entertainment, and services of the country at large, and disruptions in the California economy can have larger implications.

Advocates of these bills stress compassion for the common worker, the difficulty of making a living on the current minimum wage considering the high prices in the state, and the profits of major companies employing workers at minimum wage. Opponents of these bills stress that they aim to defy reality – which never ends well – resulting in a loss of jobs and wages for the most vulnerable in society.

The economic impact is likely to be rather devastating.

The situation highlights a common tension Christians in business experience – a balance between interests of compassion and prudent stewardship. To that end, we are going to do a quick dive into the costs of these bills, the reality they brush up against, and the corruption that has members of both parties fuming. Compassion does not have to be at odds with prudence, and even if compassion is indeed the higher good – fantasy is not a virtue. Denying reality always hurts people in both the long and short run.

The Costs of Minimum Wage

At first blush, minimum wage laws seem like a no-brainer to the Christian leader. The Epistle of James is full of condemnations for the wealthy who oppress their workers and hold back payment. The Old Testament has plenty to say about oppressing laborers who are worthy of their wages. Christians throughout history have fought for the dignity and good of the poor and downtrodden. Worker exploitation laws, in general, are, therefore, a worthy cause, and we can get behind the core idea here.

The problem is that the law of unintended consequences rears its ugly head when we act rashly.

Thomas Sowell, the brilliant economist, has this to say about minimum wage laws in his seminal work Basic Economics:

“Making it illegal to pay less than a given amount does not make a worker’s productivity worth that amount – and, if it is not, that worker is unlikely to be employed. Yet minimum wage laws are almost always discussed politically in terms of the benefits they confer on workers receiving those wages. Unfortunately, the real minimum wage is always zero, regardless of the laws, and that is the wage that many workers receive in the wake of the creation or escalation of a government-mandated minimum wage because they either lose their jobs or fail to find jobs when they enter the labor force.”

It is not surprising, then, that California already has an unemployment rate that is nearly 30% greater than the federal unemployment rate, and according to all reasonable economic analysis, this will only make matters worse in the state. According to CalMatters:

“[These laws] are going into effect in a competitive labor market that has seen employers, especially small businesses, struggling to hire and retain workers… The new fast-food minimum wage laws could push up pay for other restaurant and food workers, experts say.”

We spoke to Emilee D., a wife and mother of two living in San Diego, California, about the rising price of food service. “We don’t really eat out,” she said. “Not often. You can’t here.”

Greatly increasing the costs of doing business increases the cost to consumers (McDonalds, Chipotle, and Jack in the Box have already announced their plans for raising prices at their California locations), which leads to shrinking demand, which leads to less need for workers, and fewer services offered. It’s a vicious cycle.

In a piercing critique at The Hill titled “California’s Minimum Wage Woes Are a Cautionary Tale for the Nation,” Independent Institute research fellow Adam Summers writes, “Some workers will benefit, but many others will see their hours cut and benefits slashed or end up losing their jobs to compensate for the higher costs. Pizza Hut restaurants across the state are already planning on eliminating more than 1,200 delivery driver positions (a number that is likely to grow). In response, automated elements, such as ordering kiosks, will increase, and human-provided services will decrease. Less money will be left over for other innovations or investments in the business. Businesses that are already struggling to get by will close, leading to even more job losses.”.

Lessons for Christian Leaders

Wanting to see fast-food workers and people in the healthcare industry thrive is a good and praiseworthy impulse, but embarking on a path that will, in fact, impoverish the very people we claim to be helping is not virtuous.

Thomas Aquinas, the great theologian, once wrote, “Virtue is that which makes its possessor good, and his work good likewise.” In other words, even though Christians are not absolute utilitarians (the ends do not justify the means), the ends must have their due considerations, and reality gets a say in the matter. Impotence is not virtuous, nor is promising delusions to the needy while failing to meet their actual needs.

“If a brother or sister is naked and destitute of daily food, and one of you says to them, ‘Depart in peace, be warmed and filled,’ but you do not give them the things which are needed for the body, what does it profit?” – James 2:15-16

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