The FLSA - Reasons and Opposition
Overview | Early Minimum Wages | The FLSA - Reasons and Conflict | Conclusion & References
Gendered Analysis
While the desire to help low wage workers achieve a higher standard of living is an important issue, many economists concentrate on the social issue of gender relations as applicable to the minimum wage.
The Eugenics of Wage Floors
In his 2005 article "Protecting Family and Wage", Tim Leonard posits that the minimum wage can be used as a eugenic device. While it is traditionally thought that minimum wages can help minority groups, Leonard argues that Progressives wished to use market forces to cause disemployment of "undesirable" groups, such as women and racial minorities. A binding wage floor causes lower demand for labor, in turn creating an excess supply - unemployment. Progressives believed that this unemployment would occur in groups they wanted to push out of the work force. (Leonard 2005).
Challenges
Leonard's analysis does not provide evidence that Progressives had any reason to believe that "undesirables" would be the ones unemployed, rather than supposedly superior white males, under minimum wage legislation. Nor does he clarify how the Progressives explained white male unemployment without a wage floor or female employment with one. There is no evidence why a minimum wage would do a 'better' job at removing minorities than plain prejudice.
Evidence from the time directly contradicts Leonard's hypothesis. In a 1937 study of state-level minimum wages in Rhode Island, it was found that wage floors for female-dominated industries did not cause any significant unemployment. ("Effects of minimum wage" 1938). If such information were accurate on the national level, that would mean that Leonard's idea that the minimum was could be used as an oppressive mechanism was incorrect. Wage floors could not be used as a eugenic device if they did not complete the intended function of causing unemployment in underprivileged persons.
Male Breadwinners
Role of Unions
The Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938
Role of Voter Ideology
Role of the Southern Political System
Overview | Early Minimum Wages | The FLSA - Reasons and Conflict | Conclusion & References