Marieka Klawitter – UW News /news Mon, 30 Mar 2015 20:08:55 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 UW faculty team for five-year study of Seattle’s minimum wage increase /news/2015/03/30/uw-faculty-team-for-five-year-study-of-seattles-minimum-wage-increase/ Mon, 30 Mar 2015 20:02:12 +0000 /news/?p=36233 What will be the effects on workers, businesses, consumers and families of the city of Seattle’s ordinance increasing the minimum hourly wage to $15 by the year 2022?

Faculty from the 天美影视传媒’s schools of public affairs, public health and social work are teaming up for , a five-year research project to learn that and more.

An passed by the Seattle City Council in June 2014 mandates a citywide minimum wage increase to $11 an hour on April 1 that will grow to $15 an hour by the year 2022. The council also resolved to evaluate the impact of that ordinance and is contracting with UW researchers and others for that work.

, professor in the , will be principal investigator on the project along with , also of the Evans School, and of the .

UW co-investigators are , and of the Evans School and of the . Other co-investigators are Scott Bailey and Anneliese Vance-Sherman of the Washington Employment Security Department.

“Our goal is to make this a data-driven conversation about what is the good that is being done, what is the harm that is being done, and are we happy with that tradeoff,” Vigdor in a recent interview.

The study will be a multifaceted evaluation of the wage ordinance’s effects on workers, employers and the local economy. Its several components will include an employer survey and in-depth study of the effect on families as well as on regional pricing and administrative and census data.

The researchers listed fundamental questions about the higher minimum wage to be investigated in the research:

  • What is its impact on workers, their families, employers and the community?
  • Does it impact employment and earnings among low-wage workers?
  • Does it affect overall employment, business longevity or the mix of firms that do business in Seattle?
  • How does it affect consumer prices?
  • Does it improve quality of life measures, including health, nutrition and daily family life?
  • Does it affect public assistance program eligibility and benefits received?
  • Do nonprofit service organizations respond to higher wages by cutting back on services to vulnerable families?
  • How do low-income families and employers experience the implementation of the policy and how do they perceive its benefits and costs?
  • How do businesses adapt to higher labor costs?

The project will build on by Plotnick, Long and , also of the Evans School, on who would be affected by the wage increase. That was released in March 2014, prior to the passage of the ordinance.

The researchers will provide the city of Seattle regular updates on their study as the wage increases are implemented.

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For general inquiries about the Seattle Minimum Wage Study, write mwage@uw.edu. Principal investigator Vigdor is at 206-616-4436 or jvigdor@uw.edu; Long at 206-543-3787 or marklong@uw.edu; Romich at romich@uw.edu or 206-616-6121.

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