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The search continues for Nancy Guthrie, the 84-year-old mother of TODAY co-anchor Savannah Guthrie, as investigators examine the legitimacy of reported ransom notes and offer a reward for information leading to her recovery. The Milan-Cortina Winter Olympics are underway in Italy, with opening ceremonies and early competition drawing attention to U.S. contenders in figure skating and hockey.

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The White House refuses to say if ICE will be at polling places in November. A bill to ease display of the Ten Commandments in schools stalls in Indiana and union leaders call for the restoration of federal worker employment protections.

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Silver mining made Northern Idaho wealthy, but left its mark on people's health, a similar issue affects folks along New York's Hudson River and critics claim rural renewable energy eats up farmland, while advocates believe they can co-exist.

Boosting Ohio's Minimum Wage: Research Finds Little Jobs Impact

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Wednesday, June 10, 2015   

COLUMBUS, Ohio - As debate continues over raising Ohio's minimum wage, new economic research suggests a higher wage shouldn't hurt employment.

Critics of increasing low-end pay say it prices some workers out of the job market. That used to be the standard thinking among economists, said David Cooper, senior economic analyst for the Economic Policy Institute, but recent studies have compared employment in one location that raises its minimum wage with a neighbor that doesn't. One study looked at 600 pairs of counties along state borders. To their surprise, Cooper said, economists found very little difference in job numbers.

"Given the research, any effect on employment that would happen from these increases that we're seeing right now, it's going to be very small," he said, "whether it's positive or negative."

Ohio's minimum wage of $8.10 an hour is higher than the federal minimum of $7.25. Senate Bill 25, introduced earlier this year, would increase Ohio's wage to $10.10 an hour in 2016 if passed.

Cooper said studies have found that by paying higher wages, employers get lower turnover and higher productivity, more than enough to make up for higher payroll costs. He said a lot of minimum-wage employers are in businesses that see higher consumer demand when low-income families have more money.

"That means there's more customers coming through the door, in the retail sector in particular, and in fast food," he said. "Presumably, a lot of those workers go out and shop in retail and buy fast food."

He said the nation's minimum wage has fallen far behind inflation. In terms of purchasing power, Cooper said, the current federal minimum would have to rise to about $10 to have the same buying power it had 50 years ago.

More information is online at epi.org/pay. SB 25 is at legislature.ohio.gov.



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