The Significance of the Living Wage for US Workers in the Early Twenty-First Century |
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Authors: | Victor G. Devinatz |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Management and Quantitative Methods, Illinois State University, Normal, IL, 61790-5580, USA
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Abstract: | This article provides an introduction to the importance of the living wage for low-wage workers in the United States. Described as a wage based on an estimation of the official poverty threshold for a family of four, the living wage, as an alternative to the minimum wage, is based on the notion that people working at full-time jobs, and their families, should not have to live in poverty. After discussing the emergence and growth of living wage campaigns in the United States, this essay discusses the coverage and provisions of living wage statutes, the economic effects of living wage ordinances as well as additional benefits provided to workers and unions from living wage statute implementation. The article concludes that due to the current economic conditions in the United States, the struggle to attain a living wage will become increasingly relevant in the coming years. |
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