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Pennsylvania | 05/05/2015

Business Benefits from Higher Minimum Wage
By Amy Edelman


OP ED

As owner of Night Kitchen Bakery & Cafe, I know we need to raise the minimum wage, and we need to act now. It's good for my business, customers and our economy.

My perspective is grounded in 15 successful years as a small business owner. I own and operate Night Kitchen Bakery in Philadelphia with my husband. Weve more than doubled our staff and grown our business every year over the past 15 years. The wages and benefits we offer our employees are central to our success.

All our employees start well above the current Pennsylvania minimum wage of $7.25 per hour. We employ 20 people, with counter staff starting at $10 per hour and kitchen staff earning $12-18 per hour. We also offer health insurance reimbursement and paid time off.

With wages employees can live on, we have lower employee turnover. We know its a lot better to pay employees properly and benefit from their experience than spend money on continually hiring and training new people. Finding and training a new employee costs us roughly 20 percent of a person's annual wages. And there are naturally more mistakes and more waste as new staff learn your business and your craft. Those mistakes cost our business a lot of money. If I can pay someone a fair wage and keep them longer, it costs me less in the long run.

Happier employees improve our bottom line in other ways. Our employees enjoy their work and believe in our business. They are hard-working, efficient, and produce a superior product with better customer service. That translates into the returning customers that drive small business success.

Fair wages have also created a loyal customer following for our business. Consumers are increasingly savvy about corporate social responsibility and have a choice in where they spend their money. Our customers know we care about our workers and our community, and that increases their support for our business.

Raising the minimum wage will boost business across our state.

Workers are also customers. If we raise their pay, they have more money to spend at businesses like mine. Increased spending and consumer demand drives job growth, which has been weak in Pennsylvania in recent years. We all benefit from the extra consumer spending a higher minimum wage provides.

That's why polls show that a strong majority -- 61 percent -- of small business owners nationally support an increase to $10.10. It's why I've joined with businesses across the commonwealth to express my support by signing the Pennsylvania Business for a Fair Minimum Wage Statement.

We know that a minimum wage that's too low is actually a drag on the economy. Our current minimum wage has much less buying power than it had in the 1960s even though our economy is twice as productive. Twenty-nine states, including all six of our neighboring states, have minimum wages above $7.25.

$7.25 per hour, which translates to $15,080 for a year of full-time work, is not enough to cover basic needs for food, housing, health and security. As a result, many minimum wage workers rely on public assistance to get by. Pennsylvania's economy needs a raise.

My business demonstrates that this is doable. When an employee has the means to thrive, a business thrives. I encourage other business owners to consider how your employees and your business would be better served by having a minimum wage that strengthens our economy rather than undermines it. We won't be able to rebuild our shrinking middle class if the minimum wage keeps people mired in poverty rather than a solid start.

We have the opportunity to take action now on the will of a strong majority of voters across the state. Lets raise our minimum wage. Were all better off when employees have a fair piece of the pie.

Edelman is Co-Owner of Night Kitchen Bakery and Cafe in Philadelphia. She is a member of Business for a Fair Minimum Wage.


Copyright (C) 2015 by the Pennsylvania. The Forum is an educational organization that provides the media with the views of state experts on major public issues. Letters should be sent to the Forum, . (05/05/2015)

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