Teens will have a tough time finding a job this summer (“Recession hurting teen employment,” June 6), and one often-overlooked reason is wage mandates that create a barrier between teens who want to work and employers who want to hire.
Between July 2007 and July 2009, Congress increased the federal minimum wage 40 percent. Recent research from Ball State University attributes the loss of 310,000 teenage part-time jobs to this wage hike. Minimum wages raise the cost of hiring and training entry-level employees such as teens. Employers respond by cutting staff hours or positions and are forced to turn to more cost-effective alternatives, such as automation and self-service.
These unemployed teens are deprived of the valuable invisible curriculum that comes from reporting to a supervisor, showing up on time and working with others as part of a team. Research from Northeastern University found that teens without job opportunities — especially economically disadvantaged teens — are also more likely to drop out of high school or get tangled up in the criminal justice system.
Michael Saltsman,
Washington, D.C.
The writer is a research fellow at the Employment Policies Institute.