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Results from the 2016 Data Update

Written by Dr. Amy K. Glasmeier and Carey Anne Nadeau, OpenDataNation.com on 04/13/2017

Establishing a living wage, an approximate income needed to meet a family’s basic needs, would enables the working poor to achieve financial independence while maintaining housing and food security. When coupled with lowered expenses, for childcare and housing in particular, the living wage might also free up resources for savings, investment, and/or for the purchase of capital assets (e.g. provisions for retirement or home purchases) that build wealth and ensure long-term financial security.

The 2016 analysis of the living wage, compiling geographically specific expenditure data for food, childcare, health care, housing, transportation, and other basic necessities, finds that:
The living wage in the United States is $15.84 per hour, before taxes for a family of four (two working adults, two children), compared to $15.12 in 2015.

The minimum wage does not provide a living wage for most American families. A typical family of four (two working adults, two children) needs to work nearly four full-time minimum-wage jobs (a 78-hour work week per working adult) to earn a living wage. Single-parent families need to work almost twice as hard as families with two working adults to earn the living wage. A single-mother with two children earning the federal minimum wage of $7.25 per hour needs to work 143 hours per week, nearly the equivalent of working 24 hours per day for 6 days, to earn a living wage.

Across all family sizes, the living wage exceeds the poverty threshold, often used to identify need.

State minimum wages provide for only a portion of the living wage. For two adult, two children families, the minimum wage covers 62.4% of the living wage at best in South Dakota and 41.5% at worst in Hawaii. This means that families earning between the poverty threshold ($24,491 for two working adults, two children on average in 2016) and the living wage ($65,860 on average for two working adults, two children per year before taxes), may fall short of the income and assistance they require to meet their basic needs.