Attempting to live off of $5 per day
Published 7:42 pm Monday, March 16, 2015
Over the weekend, I challenged my colleagues to live off $5 per day in an attempt to bring awareness to the difficulty of living off minimum wage.
The math behind the challenge is simple: a minimum wage earner working 40 hours per week would have a base pay of $290. After taxes, that amount would drop to approximately $231. If we take national averages, we can assume the average family spends 13 to 17 percent of their household budget on food. For a minimum wage earner, that’s a mere $30 to $40 per week.
I’m prepared to live off $5 per day for the rest of the legislative session, and I hope my colleagues will join me. Yet, in the few days since we’ve launched this challenge, we’ve heard plenty of negative feedback:
One of the most popular arguments against an increase in the minimum wage is the claim that the minimum wage will cost Alabama jobs.
The fact of the matter is that economic data has shown an increase in the minimum wage will create an estimated 1,800 new jobs for Alabama.
Yes, the critics are correct: it will increase the labor costs to businesses.
But it will also put more money in the pockets of consumers to spend at the very companies that often pay minimum wage, thus increasing the company’s revenue to offset the cost of increased labor payments.
When a minimum wage earner makes a little more money, that worker doesn’t put the money in an IRA.
They spend it on food, school supplies, household necessities and other consumer goods.
This puts money right back into the economy — into our businesses through purchases and into our schools and government via taxes.
We also hear people claim that “minimum wage isn’t supposed to be a living wage — it’s supposed to be a starting point for you to work your way up.”
I would love to see people work their way up from a minimum wage job, but it’s entirely more difficult to “pull yourself up by your bootstraps” if you’re going to bed hungry and can’t keep utility bills paid.
Through pushing this legislation over the past two years, I’ve met people who are opposed to increasing the minimum wage who never had to support themselves from a minimum wage job.
To those people, I encourage you to accept the minimum wage challenge and live off a $5 food budget each day.
If you can’t accept the challenge, at least have an honest, non-judgmental conversation with someone who is currently struggling to make ends meet.
If you talk to them, you’ll realize that many of the hardest working people in Alabama are also the poorest — and it’s time we give them a break.