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ProSense

(116,464 posts)
Sat Apr 7, 2012, 08:23 PM Apr 2012

Low-wage workers are getting older and more educated

Low-wage workers are getting older and more educated

by Laura Clawson



When Republican Senate candidates in Missouri were recently asked if they would raise the minimum wage, two out of three of them trotted out versions of the claim that the minimum wage is for teenagers who aren't worth more and wouldn't be able to find work if employers were required to pay them more. That's a common claim from proponents of a rock-bottom minimum wage (or even none at all), and it's wrong—a majority of minimum wage earners are adults. Not only that, but the Center for Economic and Policy Research's John Schmitt and Janelle Jones show that low-wage workers, defined as those earning $10 an hour or less (in 2011 dollars), were a much older and more educated group in 2011 than they were in 1979.

In 1979, more than a quarter of low-wage workers were teenagers. By 2011, it was cut by more than half, down to 12 percent. The only other age group that lost even a tiny a share of low-wage workers in those years was people 65 and over, who went from 4.6 percent of the low-wage workforce to 4.2 percent. Every other group—meaning people in their prime working years—grew as a percentage of the low-wage workforce. People ages 35 to 64, in particular, shot from 30.8 percent to 38.1 percent of workers earning $10 an hour or less.

Low-wage workers today are not just older than in 1979, they're also better educated. The percentage who have not graduated from high school has been cut by nearly half; those with some college education, but not a four-year degree, shot up from 19.5 percent to 33.3 percent. Nearly one in 10 people earning $10 or less has a college degree, or more. And it's certainly not as if these low wages are going further than they did in 1979.

- more -

http://www.dailykos.com/story/2012/04/03/1079936/-Low-wage-workers-are-getting-older-and-more-educated




9 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Low-wage workers are getting older and more educated (Original Post) ProSense Apr 2012 OP
First off, that's really sad Confusious Apr 2012 #1
Yeah, ProSense Apr 2012 #2
I am a low wage worker man4allcats Apr 2012 #3
Excellent post. Egalitarian Thug Apr 2012 #4
Almost 57 here, Masters Degree and almost 20 years experience in my chosen field and... MarianJack Apr 2012 #5
It sucks ProSense Apr 2012 #6
Thank You, ProSense. MarianJack Apr 2012 #7
misleading Trillo Apr 2012 #8
I remember when no high school graduate would consider working for minimum wage and/or part time NNN0LHI Apr 2012 #9

man4allcats

(4,026 posts)
3. I am a low wage worker
Sat Apr 7, 2012, 09:18 PM
Apr 2012

in the College+ and 35-64 age group (a lot closer to 64 than I'd like). If not really surprising, the one thing I find perhaps moderately consoling in this is that it least I'm not alone. It's little enough comfort I can tell you.

 

Egalitarian Thug

(12,448 posts)
4. Excellent post.
Sat Apr 7, 2012, 09:27 PM
Apr 2012

I think it demonstrates a couple of the fallacies we are fed on a daily basis. Education is the key to economic recovery and that Mc Jobs are just for kids, therefore there is no need to raise the minimum wage.

MarianJack

(10,237 posts)
5. Almost 57 here, Masters Degree and almost 20 years experience in my chosen field and...
Sat Apr 7, 2012, 10:15 PM
Apr 2012

...out of work for the last 10 months.

At this point I'd feel like a billionaire if I got a full time minimum wage job. It SUCKS!

PEACE!

ProSense

(116,464 posts)
6. It sucks
Sun Apr 8, 2012, 12:29 AM
Apr 2012

"At this point I'd feel like a billionaire if I got a full time minimum wage job. It SUCKS! "

...unbelievably. It makes me want to cry.

Good luck to you.

MarianJack

(10,237 posts)
7. Thank You, ProSense.
Sun Apr 8, 2012, 12:36 AM
Apr 2012

I'm expecting something to happen this week on 2 really good interbiews I've had. One position pays under $10 an hour but has good posibilities for promotion fairly quickly. The other pays $12+ an hour and is right up my alley. Hopefully my wife will get promoted soon and get a nice raise so this 10 month nightmare may be over soon.

PEACE!

Trillo

(9,154 posts)
8. misleading
Sun Apr 8, 2012, 12:49 PM
Apr 2012

So, all the propaganda of the 80s, 90s, the "go go" years, about getting more education to help one's career prospects was essentially misleading?

Are we headed toward a world where it will take a PhD to secure a minimum or low wage job? How many years spent sitting in a classroom seat will it require in the future to be employed?

13 school years are spent in K-12 working for free, and additionally allowing the Privitized arm of the Police State collecting and undoubtedly collating every student thought ever written in a school paper or test. What is the value of that information collected to the collectors? How much are we spending collecting it? Plus 2-10 years spent in higher education, not only working for free, but actually paying to work, all in return for not even a guarantee of completion..

Who is really benefiting from the VAST GENEROSITY of citizens doing what they're told and working for free for so many years? What kind of a twisted system are we living under? Is it called, "slavery"?

NNN0LHI

(67,190 posts)
9. I remember when no high school graduate would consider working for minimum wage and/or part time
Sun Apr 8, 2012, 01:19 PM
Apr 2012

It was unheard of for a high school graduate to work for minimum wage. We received adult wages and benefits after graduating high school. Everyone I knew did. Used to have streets around here lined with factories. Both sides. The union cashiers at the grocery store made good money and had great benefits. That is just the way it was.

Minimum wage and/or part time jobs were for high school kids working at Dog & Suds or McDonald's. That is it.

Now I read we have college graduates working for minimum wage?

Don

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