New York's legislature
approved a budget that hikes the state’s minimum wage to $9 per hour.
But taxpayers, not businesses, could actually be the responsible party
for paying those extra wage costs, if a closed-door tax credit agreement
among politicos made the final budget cut.
The new wage minimum will be phased in over three years, United Press International
reports. The current level of $7.25 will hike to $8 by the end of 2013;
to $8.75 by the end of 2014; and to $9 by the end of 2015, UPI says.
The
minimum wage increase reflects a win for Democrats, who have fought
hard against Republicans and business interests who see the mandate as a
wall to economic growth. But the big loser may actually be the
taxpayer, The Associated Press reports. Original budget language for the
“minimum wage reimbursement credit” actually says employers will
receive compensation for their higher wage costs — by way of taxpayers,
AP says.
Once the minimum wage rises by $1.75- to its full
$9-per-hour mandate, employers will only be paying 40 cents of that
difference, AP reports. The remaining $1.35 will be paid by taxpayers,
in the form of a reimbursement credit that goes back to employers.
“It’s
a big subsidy for the corporate low-wage economy,” said Mark Dunlea of
the Hunger Action Network advocacy group, in the AP report.
AP
reports the tax credit deal was forged during closed-door meetings with
Gov. Andrew Cuomo and legislative leaders, and was subsequently buried
within the budget bill.
UPI did not clarify whether that tax credit was contained within the budget that passed the legislature earlier this week.
No comments:
Post a Comment