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Sunday, December 21, 2025

A Maximum Effort Needs To Be Made For The Minimum Wage

Julianne Malveaux
Julianne Malveaux

It seems that the term “poverty” has been sidelined from our national  discourse, even though 15 percent of all Americans, and 26 percent of African  Americans experience poverty. The Fair Labor Standards Act was signed into  law on June 25, 1938, so perhaps 75 years later is a good time to explore the  roots of the minimum wage and why it remains important.

The genesis of the Fair Labor Standards Act was a note a girl wrote in  Bedford, Mass. when Franklin D. Roosevelt was campaigning for his second term as  president. The note said, “I wish you could do something to help us  girls…We have been working in a sewing factory. Up until a few weeks ago we  were getting our minimum pay of $11 a week…Today the 200 of us girls have been  cut to $4, $5 and $6 a week.”

In the middle of the Great Depression, young women were earning between 10  and 15 cents an hour.  Responding to the note, Roosevelt signed  legislation that dealt with issues of the terms and conditions of work,  including wages. The law limited weekly hours to 44, established the  minimum wage at 25 cents an hour, and banned child labor. When the law was  passed, it applied to industries that employed only a fifth of the  workforce.  Private household workers (or “domestics,” mostly African  American women), and farm workers (mostly African American at that time, though  later mostly Latino) were exempted from the law.

There was enormous resistance to the legislation.  Indeed the bill  was, at one point, described as “unconstitutional.”  Roosevelt signed  121 bills, including the Fair Labor Standards Act, after Congress had  adjourned.  Essentially, FLSA restored textile workers, and many like  them, to the $11 a week that was considered barely livable.  In a  fireside chat, Roosevelt chided the bill’s detractors, “Do not let any  calamity-howling executive with an income of $1,000 a day, …tell you…that a wage  of $11 a week is going to have a disastrous effect on all American  industry.”

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Fast forward.  Now domestic workers are included in the Fair Labor  Standards Act to the point that employers are required to issue these workers  W-2 forms if they are regular workers, to withhold Social Security and other  federally-mandated taxes from their pay, and to match Social Security  contributions as required by law.  Of course, many of these workers  are paid informally, or “under the table,” and they make less than the minimum  wage.

Those who receive tips as little as $30 a month in tips earn just $2.13 an  hour.  That’s certainly something to think about when providing your  server between 15 and 20 percent at the end.  Some restaurants may  offer more than the minimum $2.13 an hour, but many do not pay as much as  minimum wage (currently $7.25).

While agricultural workers should, technically, earn the minimum wage, there  are enough exceptions to this provision that many agricultural workers do not  earn $7.25 an hour.  Additionally, undocumented immigrants have little  leverage at the bargaining table.  They earn less than the minimum  wage when they are desperate for employment. Small farms are also exempt  from paying the minimum wage.

Someone who earns the minimum wage of $7.25 an hour who works 40 hours a  week, 52 weeks a year, earns about $15,000 a year.  If they are an  hourly worker without benefits who takes any time off, the $15,000 earnings  drops off.  While many minimum wage workers are part-time workers,  some cobble together several part time jobs to make enough money to live.

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For full-time workers, parents, and others, the minimum wage is hardly a  living wage. President Obama has suggested raising the minimum wage to $9  an hour over a three-year period, taking the annual minimum wage for a full-time  worker to almost $19,000 a year.  The Federal Minimum Wage Act would  increase hourly wages to $10.10 by 2015, making annual pay about $21,000 by that  year.  It would also index the minimum wage to  inflation.  The feisty and fantastic new Senator from Massachusetts,  lawyer Elizabeth Warren, has indicated that she considers $22 an hour (or about  $45,000 a year) a living wage.

About 2 million people earn the minimum wage, and another 1.6 million  actually earn less. These are the people recorded, not the actuality of  those paid under the table. This represents less than 5 percent of the  workforce, but this is why we should pay attention to them. African  Americans, Latinos, and women are most likely to be represented in this 3.6  million. They are more likely to be young (though those 18-25 are adult and  may be raising families), less educated and single. They are the least and  the left out. They are young women raising families, students trying to  scrap together living expenses, or those with qualifications but not  opportunities.

These folks work in service and hospitality industries, serving our food,  parking our cars, taking care of our mamas, and cleaning our rooms when we stay  in hotels.  I don’t care if they are 4.7 percent of the labor force,  less or more.  The bottom line is that it is overtime to raise the  minimum wage.

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