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Minimum wage hikes: Job killer or economic helper? Quinn rekindles debate

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Other academic research has found that minimum wage hikes increase consumer spending. A study by economists at the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago reported that immediately following a wage increase, incomes in households with minimum wage earners rose on average by about $1,000 a year and spending by roughly $2,800 a year. Much of new spending was on automobiles.

An increase would make life a little easier for Kenyanna Brown, 20. The Chicago resident earns $8.75 an hour at Victoria's Secret.

"For me it would mean that I wouldn't have to live paycheck to paycheck," said Brown, a student at DePaul University. "I wouldn't have to make those conscious, hard decisions of being a young adult in college and doing what is necessary to sustain my life."

Quinn suggested that a higher minimum wage would help reduce poverty. The current state minimum wage translates to slightly more than $17,000 for a full-time minimum wage earner. The poverty line last year for a family of four was $23,050 in annual income.

But the research may not back him up. The Public Policy Institute of California released a study in 2000 that found that increasing the minimum wage does not efficiently target the poor. If minimum wage increases are passed along in the form of higher prices to consumers, as economists say they typically are, poor families end up paying proportionately more for the goods they buy, according to the study.

This is not the first time Quinn has suggested increasing the minimum wage. In his 2010 campaign, Quinn said Illinois' minimum wage should be increased every year to reflect the rising cost of living, much like Social Security payments are indexed to inflation. Nine states require automatic annual adjustments to the minimum wage to keep pace with inflation.

Currently, the state of Washington, which indexes its minimum wage, owns the highest minimum wage at $9.19 per hour, according to U.S. Department of Labor.

The chief sponsor of the minimum wage increase is Sen. Kimberly Lightford, a Maywood Democrat, who has sought to negotiate with opponents and backers of the legislation for eight months. She said she wants to roll out a bill for a Senate committee vote in the next few weeks, possibly in March.

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