Fact Sheet | Wages, Incomes, and Wealth

The impact of the Raise the Wage Act of 2023

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What does the Raise the Wage Act of 2023 do?

The federal minimum hourly wage is just $7.25 and has not increased since 2009. The Raise the Wage Act of 2023, introduced in the U.S. House of Representatives and U.S. Senate on July 25, 2023, would gradually raise the federal minimum wage to $17 an hour by 2028. The bill would also gradually raise and then eliminate subminimum wages for tipped workers, workers with disabilities, and youth workers, so that all workers covered by the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) would be at the same wage level.

Key numbers
___________

27,858,000
Number of workers affected

19%
Share of U.S. workforce affected

$86 billion
Total additional wages provided 

$3,100
Average increase per worker

What would its impact be?

EPI’s analysis shows that raising the federal minimum wage to $17 by 2028 would impact 27,858,000 workers across the country, or 19% of the U.S. workforce. The increases would provide an additional $86 billion annually in wages for the country’s lowest-paid workers, with the average affected worker who works year-round receiving an extra $3,100 per year.

Who would be affected?

Table 1 shows EPI’s estimates of the population of workers, by demographic and other characteristics, who would benefit from the Raise the Wage Act of 2023.

Table 1

Demographic characteristics of U.S. workers who would benefit if the federal minimum wage were raised to $17 by 2028

Group Total workforce Directly affected Share directly affected Indirectly affected Share indirectly affected Total affected Share of group who are affected Group’s share of total affected
All workers 146,831,000 14,727,000 10.0% 13,131,000 8.9% 27,858,000 19.0% 100.0%
Gender
Male 75,687,000 5,695,000 7.5% 5,440,000 7.2% 11,135,000 14.7% 40.0%
Female 71,143,000 9,032,000 12.7% 7,691,000 10.8% 16,723,000 23.5% 60.0%
Age group
Ages 16–19 5,293,000 2,833,000 53.5% 664,000 12.5% 3,497,000 66.1% 12.6%
Age 20 or older 141,538,000 11,893,000 8.4% 12,467,000 8.8% 24,361,000 17.2% 87.4%
Ages 16–24 19,834,000 7,306,000 36.8% 3,346,000 16.9% 10,652,000 53.7% 38.2%
Ages 25–39 50,112,000 4,021,000 8.0% 4,824,000 9.6% 8,845,000 17.7% 31.8%
Ages 40–54 45,431,000 1,762,000 3.9% 2,764,000 6.1% 4,526,000 10.0% 16.2%
Age 55 or older 31,453,000 1,638,000 5.2% 2,197,000 7.0% 3,835,000 12.2% 13.8%
Race/ethnicity
White, non-Hispanic 86,494,000 7,040,000 8.1% 6,501,000 7.5% 13,541,000 15.7% 48.6%
Black, non-Hispanic 17,619,000 3,023,000 17.2% 2,205,000 12.5% 5,228,000 29.7% 18.8%
Hispanic, any race 28,750,000 3,703,000 12.9% 3,378,000 11.7% 7,081,000 24.6% 25.4%
Asian, non-Hispanic 9,717,000 416,000 4.3% 642,000 6.6% 1,058,000 10.9% 3.8%
Other race/ethnicity 4,251,000 545,000 12.8% 406,000 9.5% 950,000 22.4% 3.4%
Not person of color 86,494,000 7,040,000 8.1% 6,501,000 7.5% 13,541,000 15.7% 48.6%
Person of color 60,336,000 7,687,000 12.7% 6,630,000 11.0% 14,317,000 23.7% 51.4%
Family status
Married parent 36,637,000 1,449,000 4.0% 2,035,000 5.6% 3,484,000 9.5% 12.5%
Single parent 13,290,000 1,918,000 14.4% 1,810,000 13.6% 3,728,000 28.0% 13.4%
Married, no children 37,987,000 1,574,000 4.1% 2,327,000 6.1% 3,901,000 10.3% 14.0%
Unmarried, no children 58,917,000 9,786,000 16.6% 6,959,000 11.8% 16,745,000 28.4% 60.1%
Education
Less than high school 14,247,000 3,813,000 26.8% 2,180,000 15.3% 5,993,000 42.1% 21.5%
High school 36,207,000 5,281,000 14.6% 4,970,000 13.7% 10,251,000 28.3% 36.8%
Some college, no degree 33,167,000 4,445,000 13.4% 3,828,000 11.5% 8,273,000 24.9% 29.7%
Associates degree 13,417,000 780,000 5.8% 1,081,000 8.1% 1,861,000 13.9% 6.7%
Bachelors degree or higher 49,793,000 407,000 0.8% 1,072,000 2.2% 1,480,000 3.0% 5.3%
Family income
Less than $25,000 15,606,000 5,043,000 32.3% 3,424,000 21.9% 8,467,000 54.3% 30.4%
$25,000–$49,999 27,224,000 3,088,000 11.3% 3,625,000 13.3% 6,713,000 24.7% 24.1%
$50,000–$74,999 25,596,000 2,137,000 8.3% 2,223,000 8.7% 4,360,000 17.0% 15.7%
$75,000–$99,999 21,089,000 1,390,000 6.6% 1,386,000 6.6% 2,776,000 13.2% 10.0%
$100,000–$149,999 28,247,000 1,529,000 5.4% 1,381,000 4.9% 2,910,000 10.3% 10.4%
$150,000 or more 27,841,000 1,032,000 3.7% 910,000 3.3% 1,942,000 7.0% 7.0%
Family income-to-poverty ratio
In poverty 9,860,000 4,186,000 42.5% 1,765,000 17.9% 5,951,000 60.4% 21.4%
100–199% poverty 20,025,000 3,957,000 19.8% 4,190,000 20.9% 8,147,000 40.7% 29.2%
200–399% poverty 45,502,000 3,969,000 8.7% 4,482,000 9.8% 8,450,000 18.6% 30.3%
400%+ poverty 71,444,000 2,615,000 3.7% 2,695,000 3.8% 5,309,000 7.4% 19.1%
Work hours
Part-time (<20 hours per week) 8,450,000 2,313,000 27.4% 1,135,000 13.4% 3,448,000 40.8% 12.4%
Mid-time (20–34 hours) 20,979,000 5,896,000 28.1% 3,434,000 16.4% 9,330,000 44.5% 33.5%
Full-time (35+ hours) 117,401,000 6,518,000 5.6% 8,562,000 7.3% 15,080,000 12.8% 54.1%
Industry
Agriculture, fishing, forestry, mining 2,263,000 265,000 11.7% 171,000 7.6% 436,000 19.2% 1.6%
Construction 8,478,000 333,000 3.9% 540,000 6.4% 873,000 10.3% 3.1%
Manufacturing 15,914,000 712,000 4.5% 1,002,000 6.3% 1,713,000 10.8% 6.1%
Wholesale trade 3,888,000 220,000 5.7% 265,000 6.8% 485,000 12.5% 1.7%
Retail trade 16,898,000 3,327,000 19.7% 2,331,000 13.8% 5,658,000 33.5% 20.3%
Transportation, warehousing, utilities 7,978,000 341,000 4.3% 488,000 6.1% 829,000 10.4% 3.0%
Information 2,970,000 122,000 4.1% 108,000 3.6% 231,000 7.8% 0.8%
Finance, insurance, real estate 9,333,000 229,000 2.5% 348,000 3.7% 577,000 6.2% 2.1%
Professional, science, management services 9,611,000 148,000 1.5% 205,000 2.1% 353,000 3.7% 1.3%
Administrative, support, waste services 5,811,000 756,000 13.0% 732,000 12.6% 1,488,000 25.6% 5.3%
Educational services 14,461,000 899,000 6.2% 786,000 5.4% 1,685,000 11.7% 6.0%
Health care, social assistance 21,163,000 1,915,000 9.0% 1,934,000 9.1% 3,848,000 18.2% 13.8%
Arts, entertainment, recreational services 2,994,000 561,000 18.7% 440,000 14.7% 1,001,000 33.4% 3.6%
Accommodation 1,736,000 372,000 21.4% 313,000 18.0% 685,000 39.5% 2.5%
Restaurants 10,032,000 3,572,000 35.6% 2,313,000 23.1% 5,885,000 58.7% 21.1%
Other services 5,896,000 830,000 14.1% 966,000 16.4% 1,796,000 30.5% 6.4%
Public administration 7,404,000 125,000 1.7% 191,000 2.6% 316,000 4.3% 1.1%
Tipped occupations
Nontipped 142,827,000 13,435,000 9.4% 11,134,000 7.8% 24,568,000 17.2% 88.2%
Tipped 4,004,000 1,292,000 32.3% 1,998,000 49.9% 3,290,000 82.2% 11.8%
Sector
For-profit 111,766,000 12,872,000 11.5% 11,324,000 10.1% 24,196,000 21.6% 86.9%
Nonprofit 12,979,000 889,000 6.8% 846,000 6.5% 1,735,000 13.4% 6.2%
Government 22,085,000 966,000 4.4% 961,000 4.4% 1,927,000 8.7% 6.9%

Notes: Values reflect the population estimated to be affected by the proposed change in the federal minimum wage. Wage changes resulting from scheduled state and local minimum wage laws are accounted for by EPI’s Minimum Wage Simulation Model. Totals may not sum due to rounding. Shares calculated from unrounded values. Directly affected workers will see their wages rise as the new minimum wage rate will exceed their current hourly pay. Indirectly affected workers have a wage rate just above the new minimum wage (between the new minimum wage and 115% of the new minimum). They will receive a raise as employer pay scales are adjusted upward to reflect the new minimum wage.

Source: Economic Policy Institute Minimum Wage Simulation Model; see Technical Methodology by Cooper, Mokhiber, and Zipperer (2019).

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How many workers would benefit in each state?

Table 2 shows the estimated impact of the Raise the Wage Act of 2023 by state.

Table 2

Summary of effects in 2028 of increasing the minimum wage to $17 by 2028, by state

State Total workforce Directly affected Share directly affected Indirectly affected Share indirectly affected Total affected Share of the state workforce affected Average annual wage increase of affected workers (2023$) Total annual wage change (2023$, millions) Percent change in average annual wages of affected workers
U.S. total 146,831,000 14,727,000 10.0% 13,131,000 8.9% 27,858,000 19.0% $3,100 $86,352 12.1%
Alabama 1,963,000 349,000 17.8% 192,000 9.8% 541,000 27.5% $4,279 $2,313 17.4%
Alaska 330,000 21,000 6.4% 32,000 9.7% 53,000 16.1% $1,876 $100 6.5%
Arizona 3,021,000 290,000 9.6% 340,000 11.3% 630,000 20.9% $961 $606 3.4%
Arkansas 1,213,000 219,000 18.0% 118,000 9.7% 337,000 27.8% $3,607 $1,215 13.8%
California 18,427,000 * * * * * * * * *
Colorado 2,681,000 161,000 6.0% 231,000 8.6% 392,000 14.6% $1,018 $399 3.7%
Connecticut 1,706,000 14,000 0.8% 35,000 2.1% 50,000 2.9% $6,471 $321 22.8%
Delaware 427,000 61,000 14.2% 44,000 10.2% 104,000 24.4% $2,412 $251 9.4%
District of Columbia 363,000 3,000 0.7% 4,000 1.1% 7,000 1.8% * * *
Florida 8,925,000 1,135,000 12.7% 1,188,000 13.3% 2,323,000 26.0% $1,233 $2,863 4.3%
Georgia 4,552,000 722,000 15.9% 479,000 10.5% 1,202,000 26.4% $4,269 $5,131 17.0%
Hawaii 685,000 * * * * * * * * *
Idaho 721,000 112,000 15.5% 76,000 10.5% 188,000 26.0% $3,519 $661 14.5%
Illinois 5,918,000 570,000 9.6% 600,000 10.1% 1,170,000 19.8% $1,426 $1,669 5.3%
Indiana 2,976,000 407,000 13.7% 314,000 10.5% 721,000 24.2% $3,506 $2,528 14.7%
Iowa 1,479,000 231,000 15.6% 156,000 10.6% 387,000 26.2% $3,258 $1,261 14.0%
Kansas 1,341,000 191,000 14.3% 136,000 10.1% 327,000 24.4% $3,619 $1,184 15.1%
Kentucky 1,825,000 311,000 17.0% 172,000 9.4% 483,000 26.5% $4,156 $2,007 17.6%
Louisiana 1,900,000 420,000 22.1% 191,000 10.1% 611,000 32.1% $5,174 $3,159 20.9%
Maine 600,000 34,000 5.7% 72,000 12.0% 106,000 17.7% $1,285 $136 5.0%
Maryland 2,929,000 197,000 6.7% 190,000 6.5% 387,000 13.2% $2,721 $1,053 10.1%
Massachusetts 3,399,000 30,000 0.9% 440,000 13.0% 471,000 13.8% $1,859 $875 7.2%
Michigan 4,310,000 535,000 12.4% 401,000 9.3% 936,000 21.7% $3,313 $3,101 14.0%
Minnesota 2,715,000 133,000 4.9% 255,000 9.4% 388,000 14.3% $1,462 $567 6.4%
Mississippi 1,162,000 283,000 24.3% 132,000 11.3% 414,000 35.7% $4,822 $1,998 19.1%
Missouri 2,694,000 346,000 12.9% 299,000 11.1% 646,000 24.0% $2,403 $1,552 9.3%
Montana 452,000 64,000 14.1% 49,000 10.9% 113,000 25.0% $2,514 $284 10.5%
Nebraska 922,000 121,000 13.1% 73,000 7.9% 194,000 21.0% $2,212 $428 9.2%
Nevada 1,377,000 176,000 12.7% 205,000 14.9% 380,000 27.6% $2,281 $867 7.5%
New Hampshire 668,000 71,000 10.6% 53,000 8.0% 124,000 18.6% $3,289 $409 14.7%
New Jersey 4,232,000 253,000 6.0% 493,000 11.7% 746,000 17.6% $1,867 $1,392 6.8%
New Mexico 890,000 139,000 15.6% 107,000 12.1% 246,000 27.7% $3,057 $753 11.6%
New York 9,053,000 211,000 2.3% 1,383,000 15.3% 1,595,000 17.6% $1,184 $1,888 4.2%
North Carolina 4,461,000 760,000 17.0% 528,000 11.8% 1,289,000 28.9% $4,240 $5,465 17.1%
North Dakota 367,000 36,000 9.9% 30,000 8.1% 66,000 18.0% $3,404 $224 14.5%
Ohio 5,193,000 724,000 13.9% 548,000 10.5% 1,272,000 24.5% $2,994 $3,807 12.6%
Oklahoma 1,666,000 347,000 20.8% 189,000 11.3% 536,000 32.2% $4,252 $2,279 16.7%
Oregon 1,828,000 * * 141,000 7.7% 141,000 7.7% $626 $88 2.3%
Pennsylvania 5,763,000 724,000 12.6% 508,000 8.8% 1,232,000 21.4% $3,968 $4,890 17.2%
Rhode Island 502,000 36,000 7.2% 48,000 9.5% 84,000 16.7% $2,257 $190 9.0%
South Carolina 2,125,000 364,000 17.1% 220,000 10.4% 584,000 27.5% $4,309 $2,516 17.5%
South Dakota 401,000 51,000 12.8% 44,000 11.0% 96,000 23.8% $2,619 $250 10.6%
Tennessee 2,915,000 493,000 16.9% 293,000 10.1% 786,000 27.0% $4,269 $3,355 17.2%
Texas 13,086,000 2,254,000 17.2% 1,266,000 9.7% 3,521,000 26.9% $4,597 $16,185 18.1%
Utah 1,384,000 167,000 12.1% 142,000 10.3% 309,000 22.4% $3,038 $940 13.5%
Vermont 292,000 21,000 7.3% 24,000 8.4% 46,000 15.7% $1,606 $74 6.5%
Virginia 3,926,000 426,000 10.9% 350,000 8.9% 776,000 19.8% $2,655 $2,061 10.1%
Washington 3,367,000 * * * * * * * * *
West Virginia 684,000 115,000 16.9% 66,000 9.7% 182,000 26.5% $3,742 $679 15.4%
Wisconsin 2,754,000 355,000 12.9% 239,000 8.7% 594,000 21.6% $3,474 $2,063 15.6%
Wyoming 260,000 39,000 15.1% 26,000 9.8% 65,000 24.9% $4,288 $278 17.4%

Notes: Values reflect the population estimated to be affected by the proposed change in the federal minimum wage. Wage changes resulting from scheduled state and local minimum wage laws are accounted for by EPI’s Minimum Wage Simulation Model. Totals may not sum due to rounding. Shares calculated from unrounded values. Directly affected workers will see their wages rise as the new minimum wage rate will exceed their current hourly pay. Indirectly affected workers have a wage rate just above the new minimum wage (between the new minimum wage and 115% of the new minimum). They will receive a raise as employer pay scales are adjusted upward to reflect the new minimum wage. Values marked * cannot be displayed because of sample size restrictions.

Source: Economic Policy Institute Minimum Wage Simulation Model; see Technical Methodology by Cooper, Mokhiber, and Zipperer (2019).

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Why are workers in some states less likely to be affected?

In summer 2023, 19 states and localities implemented minimum wage increases based on state, local, or municipal laws that already set the minimum wage higher than the federal standard. In total, 30 states and the District of Columbia have a minimum wage above the federal minimum, and many more localities have minimum wages above their state minimum wage. Workers in most of these states will still benefit from a $17 federal minimum wage, but the effect is muted because low-wage workers in those states have already seen wage increases above the federal minimum.

California, the District of Columbia, Hawaii, and Washington all have state- or municipality-level minimum wage laws that will set minimum wages close to, or above, the Raise the Wage Act’s proposal of $17 by 2028. Because of this, only a small number of workers in those states would be directly affected by the federal policy as state/local laws will have already raised the wages of low-wage workers in those jurisdictions. Because of the smaller impacted population, more detailed impact estimates are unavailable for those states. (Cells for which data are unavailable are marked with * in Table 2.)

Why is it critical that the Raise the Wage Act be passed?

As EPI’s state-by-state minimum wage tracker shows, raising the federal minimum wage is critical to protect workers (especially in the South) who have been left behind. A higher federal minimum wage can build on existing state-level standards and lock in the wage gains made by low-wage workers in the economic recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic.

Assumptions and documentation for EPI’s Minimum Wage Simulation Model

  • The estimates are for the year 2028, when the policy’s regular minimum wage is $17 and the tipped minimum wage is $15.
  • The underlying wage distribution is based on the 2022 Current Population Survey.
  • The simulation assumes nominal wage growth will be at a 5.0% annual rate between 2022 and 2023, and at an annual rate of 0.5% plus projected CPI growth in subsequent years.
  • The simulation accounts for estimated effects of projected state and local minimum wages between 2023 and 2028.
  • To read more about the EPI Minimum Wage Simulation Model, see the description in Cooper, Mokhiber, and Zipperer (2019).
Table 1

Demographic characteristics of U.S. workers who would benefit if the federal minimum wage were raised to $17 by 2028

Group Total workforce Directly affected Share directly affected Indirectly affected Share indirectly affected Total affected Share of group who are affected Group’s share of total affected
All workers 146,831,000 14,727,000 10.0% 13,131,000 8.9% 27,858,000 19.0% 100.0%
Gender
Male 75,687,000 5,695,000 7.5% 5,440,000 7.2% 11,135,000 14.7% 40.0%
Female 71,143,000 9,032,000 12.7% 7,691,000 10.8% 16,723,000 23.5% 60.0%
Age group
Ages 16–19 5,293,000 2,833,000 53.5% 664,000 12.5% 3,497,000 66.1% 12.6%
Age 20 or older 141,538,000 11,893,000 8.4% 12,467,000 8.8% 24,361,000 17.2% 87.4%
Ages 16–24 19,834,000 7,306,000 36.8% 3,346,000 16.9% 10,652,000 53.7% 38.2%
Ages 25–39 50,112,000 4,021,000 8.0% 4,824,000 9.6% 8,845,000 17.7% 31.8%
Ages 40–54 45,431,000 1,762,000 3.9% 2,764,000 6.1% 4,526,000 10.0% 16.2%
Age 55 or older 31,453,000 1,638,000 5.2% 2,197,000 7.0% 3,835,000 12.2% 13.8%
Race/ethnicity
White, non-Hispanic 86,494,000 7,040,000 8.1% 6,501,000 7.5% 13,541,000 15.7% 48.6%
Black, non-Hispanic 17,619,000 3,023,000 17.2% 2,205,000 12.5% 5,228,000 29.7% 18.8%
Hispanic, any race 28,750,000 3,703,000 12.9% 3,378,000 11.7% 7,081,000 24.6% 25.4%
Asian, non-Hispanic 9,717,000 416,000 4.3% 642,000 6.6% 1,058,000 10.9% 3.8%
Other race/ethnicity 4,251,000 545,000 12.8% 406,000 9.5% 950,000 22.4% 3.4%
Not person of color 86,494,000 7,040,000 8.1% 6,501,000 7.5% 13,541,000 15.7% 48.6%
Person of color 60,336,000 7,687,000 12.7% 6,630,000 11.0% 14,317,000 23.7% 51.4%
Family status
Married parent 36,637,000 1,449,000 4.0% 2,035,000 5.6% 3,484,000 9.5% 12.5%
Single parent 13,290,000 1,918,000 14.4% 1,810,000 13.6% 3,728,000 28.0% 13.4%
Married, no children 37,987,000 1,574,000 4.1% 2,327,000 6.1% 3,901,000 10.3% 14.0%
Unmarried, no children 58,917,000 9,786,000 16.6% 6,959,000 11.8% 16,745,000 28.4% 60.1%
Education
Less than high school 14,247,000 3,813,000 26.8% 2,180,000 15.3% 5,993,000 42.1% 21.5%
High school 36,207,000 5,281,000 14.6% 4,970,000 13.7% 10,251,000 28.3% 36.8%
Some college, no degree 33,167,000 4,445,000 13.4% 3,828,000 11.5% 8,273,000 24.9% 29.7%
Associates degree 13,417,000 780,000 5.8% 1,081,000 8.1% 1,861,000 13.9% 6.7%
Bachelors degree or higher 49,793,000 407,000 0.8% 1,072,000 2.2% 1,480,000 3.0% 5.3%
Family income
Less than $25,000 15,606,000 5,043,000 32.3% 3,424,000 21.9% 8,467,000 54.3% 30.4%
$25,000–$49,999 27,224,000 3,088,000 11.3% 3,625,000 13.3% 6,713,000 24.7% 24.1%
$50,000–$74,999 25,596,000 2,137,000 8.3% 2,223,000 8.7% 4,360,000 17.0% 15.7%
$75,000–$99,999 21,089,000 1,390,000 6.6% 1,386,000 6.6% 2,776,000 13.2% 10.0%
$100,000–$149,999 28,247,000 1,529,000 5.4% 1,381,000 4.9% 2,910,000 10.3% 10.4%
$150,000 or more 27,841,000 1,032,000 3.7% 910,000 3.3% 1,942,000 7.0% 7.0%
Family income-to-poverty ratio
In poverty 9,860,000 4,186,000 42.5% 1,765,000 17.9% 5,951,000 60.4% 21.4%
100–199% poverty 20,025,000 3,957,000 19.8% 4,190,000 20.9% 8,147,000 40.7% 29.2%
200–399% poverty 45,502,000 3,969,000 8.7% 4,482,000 9.8% 8,450,000 18.6% 30.3%
400%+ poverty 71,444,000 2,615,000 3.7% 2,695,000 3.8% 5,309,000 7.4% 19.1%
Work hours
Part-time (<20 hours per week) 8,450,000 2,313,000 27.4% 1,135,000 13.4% 3,448,000 40.8% 12.4%
Mid-time (20–34 hours) 20,979,000 5,896,000 28.1% 3,434,000 16.4% 9,330,000 44.5% 33.5%
Full-time (35+ hours) 117,401,000 6,518,000 5.6% 8,562,000 7.3% 15,080,000 12.8% 54.1%
Industry
Agriculture, fishing, forestry, mining 2,263,000 265,000 11.7% 171,000 7.6% 436,000 19.2% 1.6%
Construction 8,478,000 333,000 3.9% 540,000 6.4% 873,000 10.3% 3.1%
Manufacturing 15,914,000 712,000 4.5% 1,002,000 6.3% 1,713,000 10.8% 6.1%
Wholesale trade 3,888,000 220,000 5.7% 265,000 6.8% 485,000 12.5% 1.7%
Retail trade 16,898,000 3,327,000 19.7% 2,331,000 13.8% 5,658,000 33.5% 20.3%
Transportation, warehousing, utilities 7,978,000 341,000 4.3% 488,000 6.1% 829,000 10.4% 3.0%
Information 2,970,000 122,000 4.1% 108,000 3.6% 231,000 7.8% 0.8%
Finance, insurance, real estate 9,333,000 229,000 2.5% 348,000 3.7% 577,000 6.2% 2.1%
Professional, science, management services 9,611,000 148,000 1.5% 205,000 2.1% 353,000 3.7% 1.3%
Administrative, support, waste services 5,811,000 756,000 13.0% 732,000 12.6% 1,488,000 25.6% 5.3%
Educational services 14,461,000 899,000 6.2% 786,000 5.4% 1,685,000 11.7% 6.0%
Health care, social assistance 21,163,000 1,915,000 9.0% 1,934,000 9.1% 3,848,000 18.2% 13.8%
Arts, entertainment, recreational services 2,994,000 561,000 18.7% 440,000 14.7% 1,001,000 33.4% 3.6%
Accommodation 1,736,000 372,000 21.4% 313,000 18.0% 685,000 39.5% 2.5%
Restaurants 10,032,000 3,572,000 35.6% 2,313,000 23.1% 5,885,000 58.7% 21.1%
Other services 5,896,000 830,000 14.1% 966,000 16.4% 1,796,000 30.5% 6.4%
Public administration 7,404,000 125,000 1.7% 191,000 2.6% 316,000 4.3% 1.1%
Tipped occupations
Nontipped 142,827,000 13,435,000 9.4% 11,134,000 7.8% 24,568,000 17.2% 88.2%
Tipped 4,004,000 1,292,000 32.3% 1,998,000 49.9% 3,290,000 82.2% 11.8%
Sector
For-profit 111,766,000 12,872,000 11.5% 11,324,000 10.1% 24,196,000 21.6% 86.9%
Nonprofit 12,979,000 889,000 6.8% 846,000 6.5% 1,735,000 13.4% 6.2%
Government 22,085,000 966,000 4.4% 961,000 4.4% 1,927,000 8.7% 6.9%

Notes: Values reflect the population estimated to be affected by the proposed change in the federal minimum wage. Wage changes resulting from scheduled state and local minimum wage laws are accounted for by EPI’s Minimum Wage Simulation Model. Totals may not sum due to rounding. Shares calculated from unrounded values. Directly affected workers will see their wages rise as the new minimum wage rate will exceed their current hourly pay. Indirectly affected workers have a wage rate just above the new minimum wage (between the new minimum wage and 115% of the new minimum). They will receive a raise as employer pay scales are adjusted upward to reflect the new minimum wage.

Source: Economic Policy Institute Minimum Wage Simulation Model; see Technical Methodology by Cooper, Mokhiber, and Zipperer (2019).

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Table 2

Summary of effects in 2028 of increasing the minimum wage to $17 by 2028, by state

State Total workforce Directly affected Share directly affected Indirectly affected Share indirectly affected Total affected Share of the state workforce affected Average annual wage increase of affected workers (2023$) Total annual wage change (2023$, millions) Percent change in average annual wages of affected workers
U.S. total 146,831,000 14,727,000 10.0% 13,131,000 8.9% 27,858,000 19.0% $3,100 $86,352 12.1%
Alabama 1,963,000 349,000 17.8% 192,000 9.8% 541,000 27.5% $4,279 $2,313 17.4%
Alaska 330,000 21,000 6.4% 32,000 9.7% 53,000 16.1% $1,876 $100 6.5%
Arizona 3,021,000 290,000 9.6% 340,000 11.3% 630,000 20.9% $961 $606 3.4%
Arkansas 1,213,000 219,000 18.0% 118,000 9.7% 337,000 27.8% $3,607 $1,215 13.8%
California 18,427,000 * * * * * * * * *
Colorado 2,681,000 161,000 6.0% 231,000 8.6% 392,000 14.6% $1,018 $399 3.7%
Connecticut 1,706,000 14,000 0.8% 35,000 2.1% 50,000 2.9% $6,471 $321 22.8%
Delaware 427,000 61,000 14.2% 44,000 10.2% 104,000 24.4% $2,412 $251 9.4%
District of Columbia 363,000 3,000 0.7% 4,000 1.1% 7,000 1.8% * * *
Florida 8,925,000 1,135,000 12.7% 1,188,000 13.3% 2,323,000 26.0% $1,233 $2,863 4.3%
Georgia 4,552,000 722,000 15.9% 479,000 10.5% 1,202,000 26.4% $4,269 $5,131 17.0%
Hawaii 685,000 * * * * * * * * *
Idaho 721,000 112,000 15.5% 76,000 10.5% 188,000 26.0% $3,519 $661 14.5%
Illinois 5,918,000 570,000 9.6% 600,000 10.1% 1,170,000 19.8% $1,426 $1,669 5.3%
Indiana 2,976,000 407,000 13.7% 314,000 10.5% 721,000 24.2% $3,506 $2,528 14.7%
Iowa 1,479,000 231,000 15.6% 156,000 10.6% 387,000 26.2% $3,258 $1,261 14.0%
Kansas 1,341,000 191,000 14.3% 136,000 10.1% 327,000 24.4% $3,619 $1,184 15.1%
Kentucky 1,825,000 311,000 17.0% 172,000 9.4% 483,000 26.5% $4,156 $2,007 17.6%
Louisiana 1,900,000 420,000 22.1% 191,000 10.1% 611,000 32.1% $5,174 $3,159 20.9%
Maine 600,000 34,000 5.7% 72,000 12.0% 106,000 17.7% $1,285 $136 5.0%
Maryland 2,929,000 197,000 6.7% 190,000 6.5% 387,000 13.2% $2,721 $1,053 10.1%
Massachusetts 3,399,000 30,000 0.9% 440,000 13.0% 471,000 13.8% $1,859 $875 7.2%
Michigan 4,310,000 535,000 12.4% 401,000 9.3% 936,000 21.7% $3,313 $3,101 14.0%
Minnesota 2,715,000 133,000 4.9% 255,000 9.4% 388,000 14.3% $1,462 $567 6.4%
Mississippi 1,162,000 283,000 24.3% 132,000 11.3% 414,000 35.7% $4,822 $1,998 19.1%
Missouri 2,694,000 346,000 12.9% 299,000 11.1% 646,000 24.0% $2,403 $1,552 9.3%
Montana 452,000 64,000 14.1% 49,000 10.9% 113,000 25.0% $2,514 $284 10.5%
Nebraska 922,000 121,000 13.1% 73,000 7.9% 194,000 21.0% $2,212 $428 9.2%
Nevada 1,377,000 176,000 12.7% 205,000 14.9% 380,000 27.6% $2,281 $867 7.5%
New Hampshire 668,000 71,000 10.6% 53,000 8.0% 124,000 18.6% $3,289 $409 14.7%
New Jersey 4,232,000 253,000 6.0% 493,000 11.7% 746,000 17.6% $1,867 $1,392 6.8%
New Mexico 890,000 139,000 15.6% 107,000 12.1% 246,000 27.7% $3,057 $753 11.6%
New York 9,053,000 211,000 2.3% 1,383,000 15.3% 1,595,000 17.6% $1,184 $1,888 4.2%
North Carolina 4,461,000 760,000 17.0% 528,000 11.8% 1,289,000 28.9% $4,240 $5,465 17.1%
North Dakota 367,000 36,000 9.9% 30,000 8.1% 66,000 18.0% $3,404 $224 14.5%
Ohio 5,193,000 724,000 13.9% 548,000 10.5% 1,272,000 24.5% $2,994 $3,807 12.6%
Oklahoma 1,666,000 347,000 20.8% 189,000 11.3% 536,000 32.2% $4,252 $2,279 16.7%
Oregon 1,828,000 * * 141,000 7.7% 141,000 7.7% $626 $88 2.3%
Pennsylvania 5,763,000 724,000 12.6% 508,000 8.8% 1,232,000 21.4% $3,968 $4,890 17.2%
Rhode Island 502,000 36,000 7.2% 48,000 9.5% 84,000 16.7% $2,257 $190 9.0%
South Carolina 2,125,000 364,000 17.1% 220,000 10.4% 584,000 27.5% $4,309 $2,516 17.5%
South Dakota 401,000 51,000 12.8% 44,000 11.0% 96,000 23.8% $2,619 $250 10.6%
Tennessee 2,915,000 493,000 16.9% 293,000 10.1% 786,000 27.0% $4,269 $3,355 17.2%
Texas 13,086,000 2,254,000 17.2% 1,266,000 9.7% 3,521,000 26.9% $4,597 $16,185 18.1%
Utah 1,384,000 167,000 12.1% 142,000 10.3% 309,000 22.4% $3,038 $940 13.5%
Vermont 292,000 21,000 7.3% 24,000 8.4% 46,000 15.7% $1,606 $74 6.5%
Virginia 3,926,000 426,000 10.9% 350,000 8.9% 776,000 19.8% $2,655 $2,061 10.1%
Washington 3,367,000 * * * * * * * * *
West Virginia 684,000 115,000 16.9% 66,000 9.7% 182,000 26.5% $3,742 $679 15.4%
Wisconsin 2,754,000 355,000 12.9% 239,000 8.7% 594,000 21.6% $3,474 $2,063 15.6%
Wyoming 260,000 39,000 15.1% 26,000 9.8% 65,000 24.9% $4,288 $278 17.4%

Notes: Values reflect the population estimated to be affected by the proposed change in the federal minimum wage. Wage changes resulting from scheduled state and local minimum wage laws are accounted for by EPI’s Minimum Wage Simulation Model. Totals may not sum due to rounding. Shares calculated from unrounded values. Directly affected workers will see their wages rise as the new minimum wage rate will exceed their current hourly pay. Indirectly affected workers have a wage rate just above the new minimum wage (between the new minimum wage and 115% of the new minimum). They will receive a raise as employer pay scales are adjusted upward to reflect the new minimum wage. Values marked * cannot be displayed because of sample size restrictions.

Source: Economic Policy Institute Minimum Wage Simulation Model; see Technical Methodology by Cooper, Mokhiber, and Zipperer (2019).

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See related work on Minimum Wage | Tipped minimum wage

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