| Working Hard, Living Poor (2001) |
Nevada's Economy - Who Benefits?Published by The Progressive Leadership Alliance of Nevada (PLAN) in 2001 Download Part I (710 KB) Executive SummaryWorking Hard, Living Poor is part of a series of reports by the Progressive Leadership Alliance of Nevada that examines Nevada's economy and how working families fare in that economy. The report looks at the availability of living wage jobs in Nevada. It also presents recommendations to policy makers on how to increase the number of living wage jobs. A living wage is an amount that allows a working family to get by without government assistance. In the last three decades, nearly a million jobs were created in Nevada-the highest rate of job growth in the nation. Unfortunately, the majority of these jobs were not living wage jobs. This report was motivated by the contradictions between economic boom and the stories of Nevadans who must work multiple jobs to pay basic bills.
Key FindingsRecommendationsEditorial ExcerptsNote: "Working Hard, Living Poor Part I" was originally released in August 2001. Below are editorial excerpts about the report by three of the leading newspapers in Nevada."Labor Day more than a holiday," Las Vegas Sun, Friday, August 31, 2001, page 22A. "This week the Progressive Leadership Alliance of Nevada released its findings of a year-long study that said the federally mandated minimum wage of $5.15 an hour-last raised in 1997-isn't enough to actually put food on the table and keep a roof overhead for a typical Nevada family. For instance, one parent with two children actually would require $14.75 an hour just to make ends meet. "The alliance, an umbrella group of unions, public interest groups, environmental organizations and civil rights groups, has called on state government to enact a "living wage" law. Businesses that receive state money-tax breaks, government contracts, loans-would have to make up the difference between the minimum wage and the "living wage," which would be determined by the Nevada Legislature. State lawmakers would do well to consider this proposal." "All states need to set livable wage," Reno Gazette-Journal, Friday, August 31, 2001 "A study released this week by the Progressive Leadership Alliance of Nevada confirms what other reports have said in the past: Nevada's service-dependent economy provides many lower-paying jobs. Raising the minimum wage could have a ripple effect in the community, lowering crime, reducing the need for social services, and giving people some extra cash to invest in their community. Who can argue with that?" "Repealing the law of supply and demand," Las Vegas Review-Journal, Friday, August 31, 2001, page 16B. NOTE: This editorial was generally against the recommendations in our report; however, the Review-Journal did agree with us concerning business subsidies. "Give PLAN credit for getting one thing right, at least: Though 'tax breaks' are not a government subsidy (subsidies involve handing someone taxpayer cash, not letting them keep a little more of what they earned), it is indeed true as PLAN President Mark Nichols argues, that 'we should not be subsidizing businesses that pay their workers a poverty wage.'" |
