Pritzker touts rising minimum wage as Illinois' unemployment rate has
increased
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[December 26, 2024]
By Jim Talamonti | The Center Square
(The Center Square) – Illinois employers are bracing for minimum-wage
hikes, which may lead to more job cuts around the state.
Illinois’ minimum wage is rising from $14 per hour to $15 on Jan 1, the
final increase in a series of annual increases from a law Gov. J.B.
Pritzker signed in February of 2019. In addition, the minimum wage for
tipped workers is increasing from $8.40 per hour to $9. The youth
minimum wage, for workers under age working fewer than 650 hours per
calendar year, is going up from $12 per hour to $13.
“I’m very, very proud about the work that we did to get from $8.25 to
$15. That’s a big jump, and it put us in a leadership position in the
Midwest for attracting great workers to the state of Illinois,” Pritzker
said.
When asked at a news conference earlier this month, the governor did not
rule out another minimum wage hike.
“I think we did it the right way when we did it back in 2019. I haven’t
seen a proposal yet for a change going forward,” Pritzker said.
In February 2019, when the law passed, the state’s unemployment rate was
4.8%. It’s now 5.3%, third highest in the U.S. Only Nevada (5.7%) and
California (5.4%) are higher. The national unemployment rate in November
was 4.1%.
“At the same time that we’ve raised the minimum wage, I’ve been working
hard to create more jobs in the state to make sure that we’ve got a
competitive environment for the workers in our state,” Pritzker said.
All of the states bordering Illinois have lower minimum wages and lower
unemployment rates. Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky and Wisconsin have a $7.25
minimum wage. Missouri’s minimum wage is $12.30 per hour.
The unemployment rate in Kentucky is 5.1%. Indiana is at 4.4%, Missouri
at 3.7%, and Iowa at 3.1%. Wisconsin has the seventh-lowest unemployment
rate in the nation at 2.9%.
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Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker - Illinois.gov
Despite some individual studies showing no job cuts with minimum
wage hikes, Reason.org states, “There are vastly more studies that
find job reductions with minimum wage hikes.”
Reason.org noted that economists at the Federal Reserve Bank of St.
Louis concluded in 2021, “A higher minimum wage can also result in
employers using automation to replace more expensive human labor.”
In July 2019, several months after Pritzker signed Illinois’ minimum
wage legislation, the Congressional Budget Office estimated the
effects of a federal minimum-wage increase.
“In an average week in 2025, the $15 option would boost the wages of
17 million workers who would otherwise earn less than $15 per hour.
Another 10 million workers otherwise earning slightly more than $15
per hour might see their wages rise as well. But 1.3 million other
workers would become jobless, according to CBO’s median estimate,”
the CBO stated.
In July of this year, Chicago raised its minimum wage to $16.20 per
hour for employers with four or more employees. The minimum wage for
tipped employees in Chicago is now $11.02 per hour and is eventually
slated to match the minimum wage for non-tipped workers.
Chicago Bars, a social media account “working on behalf of Chicago
bars, restaurants, and music joints,” commented about the announced
closing of Old Town Pour House on Wells Street, posting on X, “I
have never seen bar and restaurant closings coming as fast as they
are right now in Chicago.”
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