Watchdog.org
ND
workers enjoy high wages despite lack of minimum wage law
By
Rob Port
Watchdog.org
North Dakota Bureau
June
30, 2014
HIGH
WAGES: During a visit to Williston, North Dakota, University of
Michigan economist Mark Perry snapped a photo advertising entry-level
jobs at Walmart starting at over $17 per hour.
DICKINSON,
N.D. — As policymakers in Washington, D.C., debate raising the
federal minimum wage, entry-level workers in North Dakota enjoy pay
levels nearly twice the current federal minimum.
“Effectively,
our minimum wage in town is $14 an hour,” claims Shawn Kessel,
administrator for the City of Dickinson, a community in North
Dakota’s booming oil fields.
Neither
North Dakota nor the City of Dickinson have a minimum wage policy.
Kessel
isn’t basing his estimate on any official survey, but rather his
own observations. He told Watchdog he discusses wages with local
business leaders and tracks the wages offered in job listings in his
city. He’s convinced the number is accurate, and it is certainly in
line with other data and observations in the state.
Wages
even for entry-level jobs are so high in North Dakota they sometimes
go viral. Watchdog reported previously on a photo by University of
Michigan economist Mark Perry of job listings at a Walmart in
Williston, which showed cashiers commanding wages of more than $17
per hour.
Plus,
North Dakota has led the nation in personal income growth in six of
the past seven years.
In
March, the Bureau of Economic Analysis released a report showing
North Dakota’s personal incomes have nearly doubled over the past
decade, to more than $57,000 per year. That’s a 93 percent increase
from 2003 when incomes in the state were $29,569 per capita.
More
remarkable is that North Dakota’s booming incomes come at a time
when income growth is slowing in the rest of the country. Nationally,
personal income growth slowed from 4.2 percent in 2012 to 2.6 percent
in 2013, but North Dakota nearly tripled the national rate at 7.6
percent. The state also was double the second-ranked state, Utah,
which saw 4 percent growth, according to the BEA.
North
Dakota’s per-capita personal yearly income is $57,084 in 2013, up
from $54,871 in 2012. The state now ranks third in the nation in per
capita personal income, behind only Connecticut’s $60,487 and
Washington, D.C., at $74,513.
Still,
at least one policymaker in the state supports hiking the minimum
wage. U.S. Sen. Heidi Heitkamp, a Democrat, is a co-sponsor of
legislation that would raise the federal minimum wage to $10.10 per
hour.
“I
don’t know anyone who puts in 40 hours of work who makes $15,000 a
year can make ends meet in North Dakota,” she said of the policy in
April.
But
in North Dakota, high wages even for entry-level workers seem to be a
product of supply and demand, not government policy. The state has
launched a national campaign led by Lt. Gov. Drew Wrigley to lure
20,000 new workers to fill open jobs.
See
photo and story plus other articles at Watchdog.org
|