| Paying Living Wage Good For Business, Employers Say
by bob ()
Press Release
For Immediate Release - March 29, 2000
Contact:Betsy Leondar-Wright
(617) 423-2148 x13
bleondar-wright faireconomy.org">bleondar-wright faireconomy.org
Read
the Report
Paying a Living Wage Is Good For Business, Employers Say
New report documents benefits of raising pay
"The growth
of my business is due to the high quality of my bread, which in turn
is due to the skilled employees I attract and retain with good wages
and benefits."
–
Jim Amaral, CEO of Maine bakery chain Borealis Breads
Jim Amaral is one
of the successful business owners featured in a myth-busting new report
"Choosing the High Road: Businesses that Pay a Living Wage and Prosper."
Over 40 cities and
counties—including Boston, Baltimore, Los Angeles, Chicago and San
Antonio—have adopted living wage ordinances and over 120 living wage
campaigns are underway.
"Choosing the
High Road" shows why living wages are good for business, as well
as workers and communities. The report, published by Responsible Wealth,
is available
on the web and in hard copy.
Despite the economy’s
record-breaking nine-year expansion and skyrocketing CEO pay, the typical
worker still earns less, adjusted for inflation, than in 1973, and over
one quarter of American jobs pay less than a living wage of $8 an hour.
Below that wage, a 40-hour workweek leaves a family of four under the
federal poverty line, unable to make ends meet.
A growing number of
business people are supporting living wages. Already, over 50 business
owners have signed Responsible Wealth’s new Living Wage Covenant,
pledging to pay their own employees over $8 an hour, as well as to advocate
in the public arena for higher wages for all low-income workers.
"Choosing the
High Road," by Karen Kraut, Scott Klinger and Chuck Collins, debunks
common arguments made by opponents of higher minimum wages and living
wages. It presents research on the business benefits of higher wages:
lower worker turnover and absenteeism, reduced training costs, higher
morale and higher productivity, and a stronger consumer market.
Borealis Breads CEO
Jim Amaral and five other business leaders profiled in the report are
available for interviews:
- Judy Wicks, owner
of the popular White Dog Cafe in Philadelphia, pays her 100 employees
well above local restaurant wages.
"Paying a
living wage is difficult in the restaurant business, but I encourage
other owners to try it, because it can be done. The traditional value
system of running restaurant workers into the ground needs to change
in order to create a more fulfilling workplace for everyone."
Responsible Wealth
is a growing network of over 450 business people, investors and affluent
individuals in the top 5 percent of income and wealth who are concerned
about growing economic inequality and working to promote widely shared
prosperity. Responsible Wealth is affiliated with the national nonprofit
organization United for a Fair Economy.
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