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SUSAN B. HANSEN
The Impact of a Low-Wage Strategy on State Economic
Development
The American states have pursued several different approaches
to create jobs and foster economic development, including reducing the
social cost of labor. I show that state labor costs are markedly lower
in 1995
than in 1970,
based on a factor analysis of wages and state regulations affecting unions
and the cost of labor. Corporate low-wage strategies, international and
interstate competition for business, and the growing weakness of labor
unions are posited to account for this. But regression analysis shows
that lower labor costs have had no significant impact on rates of job
creation since 1980,
have reduced unemployment only slightly, and have been less effective
in the latter respect than either tax cuts or other economic development
policies. Moreover, reducing labor costs can have adverse consequences,
such as rising income inequality, slower growth in gross state product
and productivity, and a less competitive position for states in the international
economy.
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