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A
Defining
Moment
by Thomas
Sowell
Feb 07,
2012
Governor
Mitt Romney’s statement about not worrying about the poor has been
treated as a
gaffe in much of the media, and those in the Republican establishment
who have been
rushing toward endorsing his coronation as the GOP’s nominee for
president --
with 90 percent of the delegates still not yet chosen -- have been
trying to
sweep his statement under the rug.
But
Romney’s statement about not worrying about the poor -- because they
“have a
very ample safety net” -- was followed by a statement that was not just
a slip
of the tongue, and should be a defining moment in telling us about this
man’s
qualifications as a conservative and, more important, as a potential
President
of the United States.
Mitt Romney
has come out in support of indexing the minimum wage law, to have it
rise
automatically to keep pace with inflation. To many people, that would
seem like
a small thing that can be left for economists or statisticians to deal
with.
But to
people who call themselves conservatives, and aspire to public office,
there is
no excuse for not being aware of what a major social disaster the
minimum wage
law has been for the young, the poor and especially for young and poor
blacks.
It is not
written in the stars that young black males must have astronomical
rates of
unemployment. It is written implicitly in the minimum wage laws.
We have
gotten so used to seeing unemployment rates of 30 or 40 percent for
black
teenage males that it might come as a shock to many people to learn
that the
unemployment rate for sixteen- and seventeen-year-old black males was
just
under 10 percent back in 1948. Moreover, it was slightly lower than the
unemployment rate for white males of the same age.
How could
this be?
The
economic reason is quite plain. The inflation of the 1940s had pushed
money
wages for even unskilled, entry-level labor above the level specified
in the
minimum wage law passed ten years earlier. In other words, there was in
practical
effect no national minimum wage law in the late 1940s.
My first
full-time job, as a black teenage high-school dropout in 1946, was as a
lowly
messenger delivering telegrams. But my starting pay was more than 50
percent
above the level specified in the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938.
Liberals
were of course appalled that the federal minimum wage law had lagged so
far
behind inflation -- and, in 1950, they began a series of escalations of
the
minimum wage level over the years.
It was in
the wake of these escalations that black teenage unemployment rose to
levels
that were three or four times the level in 1948. Even in the most
prosperous
years of later times, the unemployment rate for black teenage males was
some
multiple of what it was even in the recession year of 1949. And now it
was
often double the unemployment rate for white males of the same ages.
This was
not the first or the last time that liberals did something that made
them feel
good about themselves, while leaving havoc in their wake, especially
among the
poor whom they were supposedly helping.
For those
for whom “racism” is the explanation of all racial differences, let me
assure
them, from personal experience, that there was not less racism in the
1940s.
For those
who want to check out the statistics -- and I hope that would include
Mitt
Romney -- they can be found detailed on pages 42 to 45 of “Race and
Economics”
by Walter Williams.
Nor are
such consequences of minimum wage laws peculiar to blacks or to the
United
States. In Western European countries whose social policies liberals
consider
more “advanced” than our own, including more generous minimum wage laws
and
other employer-mandated benefits, it has been common in even prosperous
years
for unemployment rates among young people to be 20 percent or higher.
The
economic reason is not complicated. When you set minimum wage levels
higher
than many inexperienced young people are worth, they don’t get hired.
It is not
rocket science.
Milton
Friedman explained all this, half a century ago, in his popular little
book for
non-economists, “Capitalism and Freedom.” So have many other people. If
a
presidential candidate who calls himself “conservative” has still not
heard of
these facts, that simply shows that you can call yourself anything you
want to.
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