Here's how far a $15 minimum wage would go in every part of the country
As the push for a $15 minimum wage gains headway in different parts of America - specifically Los Angeles, Seattle, and New York - the fact remains that $15 gets you a lot further in certain parts of the country than others.
To examine this regional difference, Pew Research Center mapped the "regional price parities," (RPPs) for the nation's 381 metropolitan statistical areas.
RPPs were developed by the Federal Bureau of Economic Analysis to measure the difference in local price levels of goods and services around the country relative to the overall national price level.
RPPs are expressed as a percentage of the overall national price level for each year, which is equal to 100.
The two ends of the spectrum are Honolulu, where an RPP of 122.5 means $15 is only worth $12.24, and Beckley, West Virginia, where an RPP of $15 is worth $19.23.
The discrepancies are why many are opposed to a federal minimum wage of $15, like the one proposed by US Senator and presidential candidate Bernie Sanders (D-Vermont).
"If minimum wages don't hurt employment, then a federal minimum wage is unfair to workers in big cities because their raises will be less than those of small-town workers," Smith writes. "But if minimum wages do hurt employment, then small-town workers are going to be put out of a job -- and that's much worse."
Pew and Smith both agree that if we wanted to make purchasing power equal among minimum wage workers, we would have to make hundreds of different minimum wages depending on the cost of living in that region.
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