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HUFFPOST BUSINESS
Two Charts That Will Enrage Everyone
(Well, Except Bankers)
Maxwell Strachan: March 13, 2014
Take every single dollar made by full-time workers earning the federal minimum wage last
year. Now double that pile of cash. OK, now we're in Wall Street bonus territory.
Wall Street pulled in $26.7 billion in cash bonuses last year, according to estimates revealed
Wednesday by the New York state comptroller. That's up about 15 percent from the previous
year, and amounts to $164,530 per person when split up among the industry's 165,200
employees in New York.
In a new report the Institute for Policy Studies, a progressive think-tank that advocates for
pay fairness, paints those bonuses in a rather startling way: Wall Street's cash pile is now
nearly double what the country's 1.085 million full-time minimum wage workers made all of
last year.
Wall Street Bonuses Far Exceed Earnings of All
Full-time Minimum Wage Workers
$26,700,000,000
$15,134,665,000
Wall Street bonuses for 165,2O0 employees Annual earnings of all 1O85,000 full-time
minimum wage workers
Source: Institute for Policy Studies analalysis of New York State Comptroller and BLS data.
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That's sad of course. But it's also bad for the economy. The Institute estimates that if Wall
Street's bonuses instead went to the federal minimum wage workforce, the economy would
have benefited more than three times as much:
Bang for the Buck: $32,307,000.000
Minimum wage increase would give
economy a bigger boost
$10,413.000,000
Multiplier effect of $26.7 billion in Wall Multiplier effect of $26.7 billion extra
Street bonuses earnings for all U.S. full-time minimum wage
workers
Source: Institute for Policy Studies onololysis of New York State Comptroller and KS data, using Moody's Anciyiics
multipliers.
Why's that? Because people living at the bottom of the income ladder often need and spend
nearly every dollar they get, especially when they have children. And as the Economic Policy
Institute, another think tank that is pushing for a higher minimum wage, noted
Wednesday, around one-fifth of all children in America have a mom or dad who would benefit
if the federal minimum wage increased.
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