Today we begin debate upon the minimum wage bill
known as the Fair Labor Standards Amendments of 1960.
The bill has two major purposes. First, it will
raise the minimum wage now received by 2½ million workers from $1.10
to $1.25 an hour. Second, it will extend the protection of the Fair Labor
Standards Act to 5 million additional employees, chiefly in large-scale
interstate retail and service industries, thereby guaranteeing these employees
a fair minimum wage and a just premium for overtime.
Conscience and good business sense join in demanding
the enactment of this measure. The bill will extend to the lowest paid
workers - to 3½ million men and women and their families - a fairer
opportunity to shave our high standard of living. To pass them by - to
water down the help they need - or merely assume that prosperity at the
top will someday reach them - shocks the conscience of those who care.
The increases in purchasing power resulting from
a higher minimum wage will help to restore consumer demand required to
put our idle industrial capacity back to work. The elimination of unfair
competition based upon substandard wages will protect fairminded employers
anxious to maintain fair labor standards.
The pending bill is the result of long and careful
study. The Labor Subcommittee of the Committee on Labor and Public Welfare
held hearings on 10 days, in which it beard 77 witnesses. The relevant
bills were reviewed in executive sessions in the course of which all members
of the subcommittee made helpful contributions. The committee bill embodies
a wide consensus of opinion among Senators from both sides of the aisle.
The minority report is signed by only three Senators.
The full extent of the changes to be made in the
present law is summarized in a memorandum which I ask unanimous consent
to have printed after my remarks in the Record. At this point I desire
to speak only of the principal provisions.
MINIMUM WAGE
The bill raises the minimum wage applicable to employees
now covered by the Fair Labor Standards Act in three stages: To $1.15 an
hour, effective January 1, 1961, to $1.20 an hour on January 1, 1962, and,
on January 1, 1963, to $1.25 an hour.
In one sense, this is not new legislation. The Fair Labor
Standards Act was enacted in 1938 in order-
to protect this Nation from the evils and dangers resulting from wages too low to buy the bare necessities of life and from long hours of work injurious to health.When the original 40-cent minimum became inadequate Congress raised it to 75 cents and later to $1 an hour. Now economic progress again requires a higher wage if we are to carry out the central purpose. An increase from $1 to $1.25 an hour is necessary to put those wage earners who earn the minimum in the same position, relative to other segments of the economy, that they occupied after the 1955 amendment. Thus the present bill merely extends to lower paid workers the gains already achieved by more fortunate groups through increased productivity and collective bargaining.
* * * as to the allegation that there is an upward, forward movement immediately corresponding to the wage increase, that experience has shown that this does not happen.Any increase in the minimum would undoubtedly require some adjustment of the wages of other employees of the same business even though they earn more than the statutory minimum, but the increases would taper off rather quickly. As I pointed out earlier, since 1955 average hourly earnings have increased much faster than the statutory minimum. Generally speaking, wages at the bottom of the scale can be brought up to their old relationship without unduly narrowing differentials.
NEW COVERAGE
The committee bill would extend to 5 million additional
wage earners the guarantees of a fair minimum wage and a reasonable premium
for overtime employment.
The major expansion of coverage brings under the
act retail and service establishments whose annual gross sales exceed $1
million. Establishments grossing less than $1 million a year will not be
affected. They will also continue to benefit from the present section 13(a)
(2) exemption. I emphasize the point because there has been widespread
misunderstanding. The bill does not touch ordinary inns, hotels,
restaurants, or motels in any part of the country. For example, a motel
owner who charged $15 a unit and maintained 180 units which he rented every
night of the year would be too small for the bill to affect him.
Likewise, the bill does not apply to the independent
grocer or druggist, the country store, or even the independent department
stores and supermarkets found in most American cities. Ninety-seven percent
of all retail enterprises would not be affected.
We are concerned only with the large metropolitan
department stores and vast chains which now dominate the retail industry.
Their outlets spread through many States. The management is centralized.
Prices are often uniform. Goods are purchased in large quantities from
all over the Nation often at prices which cannot be obtained by independent
merchants. Their operations depend upon the channels of interstate commerce.
And where hotels and other service establishments are large enough to gross
a million dollars their conditions of employment also become matters of
national import.
It is grossly inaccurate to describe these million
dollar enterprises as local businesses which ought not to be regulated
by the Federal Government. In 1938 the point was doubtful, but the constitutional
power of Congress has now been established. Many Federal statutes already
apply to such large retail enterprises - the pure food and drug laws the
Wool Products Labeling Act, the Sherman Act, the Federal Trade Commission
Act and the National Labor Relations Act. The NLRB conducts elections among
the employees whom this bill would bring under the Fair Labor Standards
Act. Their employers obtain Federal assistance against boycotts and picketing.
Last year their trade associations were outspoken lobbyists for additional
Federal restrictions upon the rights to strike and picket. At the present
session some of them are actively sponsoring Federal legislation for resale
price maintenance. Bringing under the Fair Labor Standards Act the employees
of retail and service establishments grossing $1 million in annual sales
conforms the law to otherwise uniform pattern of social legislation. There
is no merit to the argument that the bill changes the balance between State
and Federal authority.
The extension of coverage to retail and service
establishments which gross $1 million annually will not even indirectly
affect smaller businesses. Experience shows that a high wage employer
can move into a community with relatively little effect upon the wage scale
of smaller local industries unless there is a shortage of qualified labor.
Similarly, the wage scales of large metropolitan department stores and
multiunit chains will exert no great influence upon smaller businesses.
The other major change in coverage will correct
a historic accident. In 1937 and 1938, there was grave uncertainty concerning
the constitutional power of the Congress to enact a minimum wage law. Various
constitutional theories were suggested. The Senate bill followed one course;
the House took another. The conference report based coverage on the work
of the individual employee. Under the present law, therefore, a worker
is covered only if he himself is engaged in commerce or in the production
of goods for commerce. The nature of the employer's business is irrelevant.
Thus, there may be two employees, working side by side in the employ of
the same employer, one of whom is protected by the statutory minimum wage
and one who is not. For example, a wholesaler's order clerk who typed orders
for goods purchased out of State would be entitled to the statutory minimum,
but the billing clerk at the next desk who typed bills for customers inside
the State would lack the same protection. The distinction is arbitrary
and capricious.
So far as I am aware, the Fair Labor Standards Act
is the only statute under which coverage depends upon the work of the individual
employee. The supposed constitutional justification no longer exists. Accordingly,
the committee bill puts coverage upon an establishment basis, as under
other labor legislation.
The change will greatly simplify enforcement of
the statute. Employers and the officials of the Wage and Hour Division
will be able to determine the status of all employees in an establishment
without checking the individual work of every employee. The inequity between
employees in the same establishment will be abolished.
The justification for applying the proposed new
minimum wage to the newly covered employees is the same as the reasoning
which supports the increase in the minimum. The employees have the same
needs. Their wages have fallen behind average hourly earnings to the same,
and possibly a greater, extent than the wages of employees earning the
statutory minimum. They are equally entitled to share in economic progress.
The fiscal burden of an inadequate minimum wage
law lies upon the community, and thus upon every taxpayer. In New York
City, 44 percent of the families to whom relief is extended include those
who are wage earners but whose incomes are inadequate. An economic burden
also lies upon competitors whose ability to pay a just wage is frustrated
by unfair, low-wage competition. But the burden which should concern us
most lies upon the American conscience. We can no longer tolerate growing
patches of poverty and injustice in America - substandard wages, unemployment,
city slums, inadequate medical care, inferior education and the sad plight
of migratory workers. The enactment of this bill is only one step, but
an essential step forward, as we cross this frontier to grasp the high
opportunities which face the Nation.