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Paying a “living wage” requires more than just meeting state and federal minimum wage requirements. Living in certain communities is more expensive and requires people to earn more to sustain basic life necessities. As an employer, paying a living wage can feel like a burden to the bottom line, but it can be a powerful investment in your people that positively affects revenues.
A living wage is an hourly employee pay rate that each working adult in a household requires to meet typical expenses for essential goods, like food, medical care, housing and transportation. Living wage values vary depending on the household’s size, the composition of adults and children, and location. For example, the living wage will be very different for a Seattle family of four with two working adults and two children than for a single adult living in New York City.
“When you’re setting something like the federal minimum wage, you want to consider the averages,” said Holly Sklar, CEO of Business for a Fair Minimum Wage, an advocacy group that supports gradually raising the floor. “When talking federally, it’s a floor that’s adequate for the country as a whole. When you’re talking about an individual, or city, or a state, you look closer to home to determine what is living wage.”
If a business owner wants to offer a living wage to their employees, they have a handy tool to determine the right number. The Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) developed a living wage calculator that covers every county in every U.S. state. The calculator shows the living wage for households of varying sizes as well as the local poverty and minimum wages.
The living wage for the U.S. as a whole in 2022, for example, was $24.16 per hour before taxes for a family of four with two working adults and two children.
A region’s minimum wage isn’t always equal to its living wage. For example, in Middlesex County, New Jersey, the current state minimum wage of $13 per hour does not meet the standards for a living wage for a household of any size.
The household with the lowest wage needs – two working adults and no children – requires a wage of $15.54 per hour to be considered a living wage. Of course, employers can and often do choose to pay more than the mandated minimum wage, but they are not required to do so.
If you’re considering raising your employees’ compensation to a living wage or higher, run a cost-benefit analysis to see what you can reasonably afford before running payroll with dramatically increased amounts.
Currently, the federal minimum wage is $7.25 per hour. States and localities also have their own wage legislation, sometimes mandating more than the federal standard. Washington, D.C., boasts the highest minimum wage in the U.S. at $16.10 per hour, followed closely by California at $15 per hour and Washington state at $14.49 per hour.
On the other hand, some states maintain no minimum wage, including Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana. In these places, the federal minimum wage applies.
However, it’s worth noting that if the minimum wage had tracked inflation since 1960, it would have been roughly $21.50 in 2020. Today, 29 states plus D.C. and more than 20 cities have raised the minimum wage beyond the federal minimum to account for the inflation-driven decline in minimum wage value.
But minimum wage doesn’t represent average wages, which have risen over time. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the median annual salary of a U.S. worker in the final quarter of 2021 was $56,628 for men and $46,800 for women. For a full-time, year-round worker, that breaks down to about $27.23 and $22.50 per hour, respectively.
The overall value of those wages, though, has remained level since the 1960s; in other words, while the nominal wage has risen for the average American worker, the purchasing power of those wages has remained largely stagnant.
There’s a nationwide movement to increase the federal minimum wage to $15 per hour. More than half of U.S. states have higher minimum wages than the mandated federal minimum wage.
Once the legally required minimum wage has been met, businesses can choose to set compensation at any rate they’d like.
In general, there are two primary schools of thought:
Some experts believe wages and employee compensation packages are purely a consideration of supply, demand and profitability.
“It is reasonable to assume that most employers, particularly small businesses, want to pay their employers a fair and sufficient living wage; however, with or without this motivation, this becomes a function of basic economics,” said Rob Drury, executive director of the Association of Christian Financial Advisors. “To attract, maintain and motivate quality employees, a business must compensate appropriately, and I use the term ‘appropriately’ rather than ‘fairly’ to emphasize that the living wage figure eventually comes down to a natural market equilibrium of supply and demand, rather than a subjective evaluation of ‘fairness.'”
In other words, the market will set the appropriate level of compensation. Pay too little, and you won’t be able to attract the right talent; pay too much, and you could find yourself hemorrhaging money.
Sklar and her organization believe offering a living wage (and indeed raising the mandated minimum wage) will yield the most positive outcomes for individual businesses and the economy at large.
Sklar points to the long-term benefits of paying employees more, which she said might result in lower growth quarter over quarter but would be more effective in retaining employees, boosting morale and increasing long-term productivity.
“One of the things our business members stress is looking at the whole picture,” Sklar said. “Low pay often means high turnover, and with a reduced turnover [due to higher pay], businesses often see substantial savings in recruiting and training costs. There are also savings from managers able to spend time on more productive tasks, as well as less product waste through lower error and accident rates.”
Sklar added that customer service tends to be significantly better when wages are higher, resulting in a happier, more loyal customer base.
“We know that frontline employees often make the difference between repeat customers and lost business,” she said.
Strategies for ensuring repeat business include personalized customer service, offering freebies, and soliciting and valuing customer feedback.
You can do many things to pad employee compensation without raising wages. If you can’t reasonably afford a large-scale pay raise without overburdening margins, Drury suggested leveraging employee benefits packages to boost employee compensation for a lighter expense.
“Total compensation is an important principle, as most employees will look at how the whole package rewards them,” Drury said. “Benefits packages can provide effectively greater compensation at a lower cost.”
Here are a few of the benefits and perks you could offer employees instead of (or in addition to) offering a living wage:
If you stick with the state or federally mandated minimum wage levels instead of offering a living wage, you’ll comply with the law and ensure lower payroll expenditures. However, not offering a living wage may adversely affect employee performance. You may also see increased turnover in positions that pay only minimum wage.
Consider a cost-benefit analysis comparing the productivity losses and costs of training new employees versus paying a living wage. In many cases, paying a living wage is more cost-effective.
While every business must manage costs and remain profitable, a happy worker is a productive worker, and a productive company is a healthy one. Whether it means offering a living wage or adjusting compensation to ensure employee happiness and boost labor market competitiveness, sometimes it’s a worthwhile investment to pay a bit more to your employees upfront.
Kimberlee Leonard contributed to the reporting and writing in this article. Some source interviews were conducted for a previous version of this article.
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