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						Column: What would a $15 minimum wage in U.S. mean in 
						retirement? Plenty
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		 [March 02, 2021]  By 
		Mark Miller 
 CHICAGO (Reuters) - One of the many myths 
		about the minimum wage is that it mainly helps teenagers. That is false, 
		but also ironic - because one of the groups that would be helped most by 
		a higher minimum wage is seniors.
 
 The fate of the proposal by Democrats in U.S. Congress to boost the 
		minimum wage from $7.25 to $15 is not clear, but we do know this: if 
		approved, this legislation would improve the retirement outlook for 
		millions of people of color and those with low wages. It also would 
		improve the financial outlook of the Social Security trust funds, which 
		are facing a solvency problem around 2034.
 
 Wage inequality and flat wage growth are primary culprits in the uneven 
		retirement landscape we now face - and the racial gap in retirement 
		wealth is especially stark. In 2019, the median net wealth - including 
		home equity - of white households over age 65 was $326,170, compared 
		with just $75,190 for Black households, and $63,560 for Latinos, 
		according to analysis of Federal Reserve data by the Joint Center for 
		Housing Studies of Harvard University.
 
		
		 
		
 A majority of Black and Latino retirees have trouble covering basic 
		living expenses, according to the Elder Index https://nyti.ms/37TebRo, a 
		data set from the University of Massachusetts Boston. (https://nyti.ms/37TebRo).
 
 The racial wealth gap in retirement is not only a matter of today’s low 
		wages. It stems from historic racism in the labor market dating all the 
		way back to slavery, Jim Crow-era Black Codes, redlining practices and 
		more. And erasing the gap will take more than a higher minimum wage. For 
		one thing, it would be enormously helpful to boost Social Security 
		benefits at the low end of the income scale.
 
 The proposal for "baby bonds" now circulating in Congress also could 
		help over time - the idea here is to create a federal program of baby 
		bonds, which would provide every child with a government-funded trust 
		account at birth, starting with a $1,000 contribution; those born into 
		lower-wealth families would receive more contributions over time, and 
		the accounts would benefit from compound interest growth.
 
 HOW $15 PER HOUR HELPS
 
 A $15 minimum wage would translate into a raise for nearly one-third of 
		Black Americans and one-quarter of Latinos, according to the Economic 
		Policy Institute https://bit.ly/3qZXZVI. (https://bit.ly/3qZXZVI) The 
		group’s research also indicates that only 10% of minimum wage earners 
		are teenagers.
 
 The advocacy group Social Security Works - working with Social Security 
		data - calculates that a single worker who earns the current minimum 
		wage for her entire life and claims Social Security benefits this year 
		at her full retirement age would receive a monthly benefit of $979.80. 
		With a lifetime income of $15 per hour, her monthly benefit would be 
		$1,409.60. That is considerably higher - and it is fairly close to the 
		average retirement benefit paid in 2019 - $1,503.
 
		
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			 A man holds up a minimum 
			wage sign at a rally held by fast food workers and supporters to 
			celebrate the California Labor Commissioner’s order for the company 
			to rehire and compensate workers who went on strike for coronavirus 
			disease (COVID-19) protections, in Los Angeles, California, U.S., 
			February 18, 2021. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson 
            
			 
A higher minimum wage also would improve the long-range solvency woes of the 
Social Security trust funds. The program is funded mainly by the 12.4% payroll 
tax, which is split evenly by workers and employers, so the trust fund’s health 
is highly sensitive to improvements - or deterioration - of the payroll tax 
base. The Social Security trustees report last year indicated that faster wage 
growth could improve the program’s long-range finances by as much as one-third.
 “In short, updating the minimum wage is a win for working families, for the 
economy, and for our Social Security system,” said Nancy Altman, president of 
the advocacy group Social Security Works, which is promoting the wage hike.
 
 We still need other reforms to Social Security that would improve benefit 
adequacy. As a candidate, President Joe Biden proposed reforms that include 
crediting caregivers in their benefits for time spent out of the workforce, 
expanding benefits for widows and seniors who had collected payments for 20 
years, and a more generous yardstick for determining Social Security’s annual 
cost-of-living adjustment.
 
 A good case can be made to revise Social Security’s actuarial adjustments for 
early and late claiming. The system revolves around the full retirement age (66) 
- the age when you can receive 100% of your earned benefit. Benefits are reduced 
by 6.7% for every 12 months before that age, and increased about 8% after age 66 
for every 12 months up until age 70.
 
 The current formula has its origins in changes to Social Security made in the 
1950s, with some tweaking along the way - the last revisions were made in 1983. 
Since then, actuarial factors have changed, especially life expectancy. In 
particular, the early claiming reductions should be reduced - a change that 
would be especially helpful for older workers forced into retirement by the 
pandemic.
 
 
 At the same time, raising the full retirement age is just about the worst reform 
idea I can think of. Retirement ages already are rising gradually to 67 from 65 
under the changes enacted in 1983. Further increases would only increase 
retirement wealth inequity and have a disproportionate impact on people of 
color, who tend to live shorter lives and often need to file for Social Security 
at earlier ages.
 
 When it comes to reforming Social Security, we should do no harm.
 
 (Writing by Mark Miller; Editing by Matthew Lewis)
 
				 
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