Inflation Triggers Mandatory Minimum Wage Increases in California
The state’s unemployment rate is well above average, yet there’s a ballot initiative hoping to push the minimum wage to $18 an hour.

When California passed a massive boost in its minimum wage six years ago so that it would eventually reach $15 an hour, the law included a component that tied the minimum to inflation levels. If inflation starts getting too high, the law forces a mandatory increase in the minimum wage.
This week, Gov. Gavin Newsom's budget director, Keely Martin Bosler, announced that the massive inflation America is seeing is going to force the minimum wage in the state to automatically increase to $15.50 next January. The law requires this automatic adjustment if the inflation rate grows past 7 percent. The Los Angeles Times reports that it's possible that the minimum wage might rise by another 50 cents if inflation continues.
Bosler, of course, sees only the positive here, saying it will help poor families pay for the higher food prices we're all enduring: "They have a huge impact to those families that are living off of those lower wages and their ability to cover the cost of goods."
The national unemployment rate right now is a low 3.6 percent, which the Biden administration is bragging about—just don't look at the labor participation rate!
Rising wages during this time frame is natural, but it's also worth noting that California's unemployment rate continues to be higher than the national average, sitting at 4.9 percent. Just four states and Washington, D.C., have a higher unemployment rate. According to data from California's Employment Development Department, almost every county in California has higher unemployment rates than the average, and some are running more than twice the national average. Two counties—Colusa and Imperial—have double-digit unemployment rates.
At the same time, businesses have also been hit hard by inflation, and those that operate on tight margins (retail stores, restaurants, and pretty much every small business) are going to have new struggles. Combined, inflation and a higher minimum wage will make it difficult for these businesses to take on new employees and keep the ones they already have.
"We recognize this is the law but this has the opposite effect on the people they're trying to help," John Kabateck, state director of the National Federation of Independent Business California, told the Times. "This just adds more pain to the struggle."
Even though California is the state with the highest minimum wage in the country, this is apparently still not enough for some folks. The inflation-triggered increase baked into the 2016 law was the result of a compromise between lawmakers and labor activists, who had begun circulating a ballot initiative that would have automatically tied future minimum wage increases to inflation, meaning that elected officials would no longer have any control over the minimum wage at all.
But now, even though the $15 minimum wage finally kicked in just this year, activists are pushing yet again. As officials were announcing this new unscheduled wage hike, proponents announced they had gathered enough signatures to for a ballot initiative to hike the minimum wage up even further—to $18 an hour. The proposal is being pushed by Joe Sanberg, wealthy entrepreneur and early investor in meal delivery service Blue Apron.
This ballot initiative will bring back the plan to automatically tie the minimum wage to inflation and the consumer price index. When inflation goes up, minimum wages will go up. When inflation goes back down, the minimum wage…will not, in fact, go down. Per the ballot initiative, the minimum wage would only ratchet in one direction.
Sanberg notes that the idea of an $18 minimum wage is "wildly supported." Of course it is—for those who are actually able to get jobs. As for the rest, there are many reasons why California's population is both aging and declining. Lower- and middle-income people are leaving California for jobs in other states, according to a study released in March by the Public Policy Institute of California. Housing costs are the biggest factor, but the survey found 333,000 people leaving the state over the past decade in order to get work. Raising wages even higher can't fix this problem, but it can make it worse.
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If a dog runs faster, he might catch that tail.
At least we'll all be billionaires.
Perfect for that new billionaire tax!
It should be fine since it won't be long before the purchasing power of a billion dollars will be less than a gallon of milk.
And to think people laughed when I bought all that dogecoin... oh shit!
This has to stop!
Prices have doubled in a year.
The rich getting richer! There is no other rational explanation.
You! Cattle, sheep, how much will you tolerate? How are those velvet chains? Chafing a little?
And we thought that there would be no logical reason for our leaders to push inflation. "Oh, come on, righty McTrumpyPants, our leaders aren't infallible, they're not TRYING to increase inflation!"
Figures -- the economic geniuses in Sacramento put in a positive feedback loop so inflation will drive wage hikes will drive inflation will drive wage hikes, etc.
Yeah, its the Firefighters Solution to Inflation: like setting some backfires to stop the main blaze: create lots more inflation in many industries, so when inflation catches up to them, it will all just stop, right? I mean, right? Wow, those Sacto legislators are just SO SMART! (ok, sarcasm off, now)
Next will come mandatory hiring to prevent the unemployment rate from spiking.
Fuck the courts, no government should have the right to raise wages in private companies especially by voter referendum.
https://twitter.com/JordanSchachtel/status/1525174609531781125?t=0XBVL56-SFG8sGE2nsWb6w&s=19
If you had any doubt about who is running the show in Ukraine, here's Zelensky's top adviser promoting a CNN clip and condemning Rand Paul.
[Video]
https://twitter.com/ColumbiaBugle/status/1525168784587337728?t=VXb5QmZ50IJGUI51o5zlEw&s=19
U.S. House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-MD): "I know there's a lot of politics here, but we're at war."
[Video, thread]
I’d say that should be flagged as misinformation.
But he didn’t say who “we're” at war with.
The answer is us. He’s at war with us.
Correct
https://www.foxbusiness.com/politics/house-representatives-staff-free-peloton-memberships-cost-taxpayers
But Reason's leading economics expert says there is no inflation. It's just a myth spread by wingnut.com.
#DefendBidenAtAllCosts
What, you don't believe in democracy?
LOL I've been saying it for years -- unless you fix the money, you're gonna win the 'fight for $15' and immediately have to start the 'fight for $25'.
Yea, they got their 15. Now everything is more expensive, so it's worse than 12 was two years ago. Couldn't possibly be related, though. Paying people more to be less productive is definitely a good idea.
CA should just set their minimum wage at $100/hr now so they don't have to keep screwing with it...of course then a burger at McD's will be about $75 (cheese is $20 extra of course) and no one from any other part of the planet will be able to afford to take a vacation there but that's their problem...
You're a big ol' meany head, saying only $100 an hour. That's only $200k a year. Nobody can afford to live in California on that! They should make it $500 an hour. Then everyone will be earning a million dollars a year and everyone can afford to live there!
That's just logic, duh.
"People don't need no jobs!
I'm gonna tell you what people need.
People need MONEY! Lots and lots of money!"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WT9RJxqDIAI
I remember when we were joking about 'Why not make it $50/hr?'
The obvious solution is to kill all progressives
Every once in a while a society just needs a good dose of chemotherapy for the cancer of communists. But I think just shaving the most insane 5% off the top would really settle the others right the fuck down.
Though, hell. Maybe the progressives are that 5% I'm thinking of.
I'm gonna need a bigger wood chipper.
The good news is that they are not productive people. So, you could argue that it would increase efficiency.
Given that companies in CA are the economic division of the democrat party and remains a contributing factor to many of the crisis that befell the nation, I won't shed any tears if they were forced to pay 18 dollars an hour.
I would feel bad for family owned pho and boba places (the cultural lifeblood of OC, it would seem) but if you play stupid games, you get stupid prizes. Even in my own social circles, 70-80% are progs.
According to the Census Bureau who calculates real poverty based on not just wages but the cost of living, taxes, etc. California ranks number 1 for poverty with Maryland 2 and New Jersey 3. California is the leader of poverty and just keeps making it worse. They also have the highest tax on gas yet have the worst roads in the country.