By Macro Pulse — dissecting the systems behind the headlines.
$58 for a double shift.
Rent up 40 %.
Insulin now two days’ pay.
Yet Washington still prices 2025 labor at the 2009 sticker of $7.25.
1. Sixteen Years on Ice — The Timeline Nobody Asked For
1938-2009: 22 federal raises.
2009-2025: 0 raises — the longest freeze in Fair Labor history.
| RAISE ERA | YEARS BETWEEN HIKES | CUMULATIVE CPI |
| 1974-1997 | ≤ 5 yrs | 118 % |
| 1997-2007 | 10 yrs | 28 % |
| 2009-2025 | 16 yrs | 43 % |
Result: $7.25 today buys 70 ¢ of its 2009 value — a real-wage erosion of 29.6 % (real wage now $7.25; in 2009-dollars ≈ $5.11).
2. The Vanishing Paycheck — Where Every Dollar Went
| YEAR | NOMINAL | 2025 DOLLARS | REAL-LOSS |
| 2009 | $7.25 | $10.30 | — |
| 2025 | $7.25 | $7.25 | -29.6 % |
A full-time worker earns $15,080/yr — below the 2025 poverty line for a single adult ($15,650).
Living-Wage Reality Check
MIT calculator says a no-kids adult needs $17.70/hr just to break even. Missing: $10.45/hr or $21,736/yr — money that would cover 3.8 months’ rent, a year of ACA premiums, and a timing-belt repair.
3. Poverty Paychecks, Premium Prices — The $50 B “Quiet Recession”
- Minimum-wage households spend 91 % of income locally — the fastest economic fuel available.
- Freeze real wages for 16 years and roughly $50 billion of demand disappears every year (more than MLB + the entire craft-beer industry combined).
- Each extra $1 in a low-wage paycheck returns $1.21 in GDP within twelve months.
4. Patchwork Republic — Cross a Street, Double Your Pay
Twenty states still stuck at $7.25:
Alabama, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, New Hampshire, North Carolina, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Wisconsin, Wyoming.
High-Wage Proof-Points
| CITY / JURISDICTION | 2025 MINIMUM |
| Los Angeles (hotel staff) | $22.50 |
| Tukwila, WA (≥ 500 emp) | $21.10 |
| Seattle, WA | $20.76 |
| Washington, D.C. | $17.95 |
| Denver, CO | $18.29 |
Tourism didn’t die in L.A. Tech didn’t flee Seattle. Commerce survived; poverty wages didn’t.
5. The True Cost Curve — Turnover, Menu Prices, GDP
- Turnover: Replacing a $25 k worker costs 16 % of salary. Minneapolis fast-food shops saw quits fall one-third after a jump to $15.
- Prices: A 25 % wage bump in San Jose nudged menu prices 1.45 % — 48 ¢ on a $33 dinner.
- GDP: CBO modelling shows each dollar of low-wage income adds 30-50 ¢ to output via demand spillovers.
6. Inside the
Raise the Wage Act 2025
- Day-one hike to $9.50, stair-stepping to $17 by 2030; then indexed to median-wage growth.
- Ends tipped, youth, and disability sub-minimums within five years.
- 22.2 million workers get a raise; average boost $3,200/yr.
- $70 billion in new wages — enough to fund the National School Lunch Program three times over.
7. Myth-Busting the Wage War
| MYTH | REALITY |
| “Small biz will fold.” | States at $15+ logged 7 % more small-biz openings (2024 Census BFS) than $7.25 states. |
| “Prices will explode.” | Labor is ~30 % of diner costs; a 30 % raise shifts a $12 burrito to $13.10. |
| “It’s just teenager money.” | Adults 20-55 hold 90 % of minimum-wage jobs; avg breadwinner age = 36. |
8. The $450 Million Lobby Wall
2009-2025 anti-raise lobbying spend: $450 million (U.S. Chamber alone $82 M in 2024).
Year-by-Year Wall (selected)
| YEAR | LOBBY $ (M) |
| 2011 | 18 |
| 2015 | 26 |
| 2019 | 34 |
| 2023 | 61 |
| 2024 | 82 |
Sixty-seven percent of voters — including 55 % of Republicans — support at least $15.
Cheapest thing in America? Your labor, if PACs stay cheaper for Congress.
9. What Doing Nothing Really Costs
- Health: $7.25 counties record 21 % more ER visits for preventable issues.
- Education: Kids in low-wage homes read two grade levels behind by eighth grade.
- Growth: Sub-living wages shave 0.2 percentage points off annual GDP — drag that compounds like interest.
Bottom Line
America’s wage floor isn’t merely stuck — it’s sinking. Each dawn Congress delays, workers trade irreplaceable hours for shrinking dollars.
Macro Pulse breaks down the systems behind the headlines.
Tap follow for the next deep cut — and keep one eye on Capitol Hill’s wage thermostat.