The latest study on the impact of the minimum wage increases in Minneapolis and St. Paul has found that while they inevitably led to an overall bump in wages, they also allowed for a decline in hours worked and the number of jobs.
In their second series of reports on the topic, researchers at the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis and the University of Minnesota waded through the tricky task of separating out the impact of the minimum wage hikes — on their way to $15 an hour — from the pandemic and the civil unrest after the murder of George Floyd.
When they released their initial findings in November 2021 showing a decrease in restaurant jobs, the researchers set aside some of the 2020 data, noting the unprecedented events of that year could have skewed it. Since then, they've updated their analysis with two more years of data and employed additional strategies to try to isolate the impacts from just the wage increases.
"I think we've addressed a lot of the skepticism using these additional approaches," said Anusha Nath, an economist at the Minneapolis Fed who conducted the study along with University professors Loukas Karabarbounis and Jeremy Lise. "That gives us confidence that we're picking up the effect of the minimum wage."
The researchers concluded that from 2018 to 2021, overall wages rose and overall hours, jobs and earnings declined by between 0.5% and 2.3% in the two cities.
The largest impacts were in the low-wage industries of retail and restaurants. In those sectors, wage increases were sometimes as high as 10%. Meanwhile, hours and jobs shrank by more than 20%, and in some cases, by more than 40% during that four-year span.
Overall, Minneapolis lost about 5,400 jobs and St. Paul lost 3,800, Nath said.
Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, who supported the $15-an-hour minimum wage increase as a City Council member, noted the 10-year research project — which both cities commissioned — to study the impact of the wage increases is at its halfway point.