
I was listening to a young woman’s podcast I sometimes catch, and there was a portion of her show where she was talking about today’s minimum wages and the cost of the average two bedroom apartments in each state.
First off, what is the minimum wage in each state, you may be asking?
Well, of course, they vary in each state.
So I’ll throw out a few states with their minimum wages.
THEN I’ll share the average median income of 50% of households in their area, and finally the minimum amount of income you must make in order to afford a two-bedroom apartment in said state. These are all 2023 numbers.
I’m going to start with my state:
Colorado:
Minimum Wage: $13.65/hour
Median Income of 50% of Households: $1,452/month
Income in Order to Afford a 2-Bedroom Apartment (Fair Market): $32.13/hour
New Jersey:
Minimum Wage: $14.13/hour
Median Income of 50% of Households: $1,545/month
Income in Order to Afford a 2-Bedroom Apartment (Fair Market): $33.50/hour
Louisiana:
Minimum Wage: $7.25/hour
Median Income of 50% of Households: $945/month
Income in Order to Afford a 2-Bedroom Apartment (Fair Market): $19.39/hour
Texas:
Minimum Wage: $7.25/hour
Median Income of 50% of Households: $1,150/month
Income in Order to Afford a 2-Bedroom Apartment(Fair Market): $25.06/hour
Washington State:
Minimum Wage: $15.74/hour
Median Income of 50% of Households: $1,486/month
Income in Order to Afford a 2-Bedroom Apartment (Fair Market): $36.33/hour
New York:
Minimum Wage: $14.20/hour
Median Income of 50% of Households: $1,331/month
Income in Order to Afford a 2-Bedroom Apartment (Fair Market): $40.08/hour
Pennsylvania:
Minimum Wage: $7.25/hour
Median Income of 50% of Households: $1,255/month
Income in Order to Afford a 2-Bedroom Apartment (Fair Market): $23.61/hour
Missouri:
Minimum Wage: $12.00/hour
Median Income of 50% of Households: $1,140/month
Income in Order to Afford a 2-Bedroom Apartment (Fair Market): $18.54/hour
California:
Minimum Wage: $15.50/hour
Median Income of 50% of Households: $1,429/month
Income in Order to Afford a 2-Bedroom Apartment (Fair Market): $42.25/hour
You can read all the states’ information here.
Now, I don’t know about you, but I don’t make anything near $32/hour here in Colorado. Most jobs I’ve looked at since I’ve job searched from 2021 to present day don’t offer anything close to that amount. The most I’ve seen, at least in my field (well, my old field of office work) was around $20/hour.
Considering most individuals don’t make the amount needed to afford a decent two-bedroom apartment, how do they eat, pay utilities, and perhaps pay a car loan or student loan in addition to that?
I realize from reading several years ago that wages have stagnated since the mid-1970s and haven’t kept up with the cost of living. But I didn’t realize it was THIS BAD.
Do you remember when Bernie Sanders was running for president and was advocating for a $15/hour minimum wage? Although, that was across the board and didn’t account for each state having different minimum wages and costs of living.
I recall a few years back, pulitzer prize winning journalist Chris Hedges saying truly the average minimum wage should be more like $22/hour. That seems more on point for many of the more medium to expensive states.
In any case, I know the couple of decades I have left to work, I’ll never be making what is expected and those expected incomes will likely go up in the subsequent years. When do costs ever go down?
In my opinion, this is horrible and not right. Because wages haven’t been keeping up with cost of living, so many people can’t afford to ever buy a house on their own. Meaning, in order to survive in this terrible economy, a multitude of people/family members must live together with multiple incomes to pay the rent and utilities of an apartment. I know this from firsthand experience, as that’s what the situation is in my family.
So, what are your thoughts on this? Are you one of the few lucky people to be able to afford to live in a house, have a high income, or are you somewhere in between? Maybe you’re struggling like most of us. Share your thoughts. Thanks!
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Works cited:
“Out of Reach 2023: The High Cost of Housing.” National Low Income Housing Coalition, June 14, 2023.
Amen to all this. In some places, it costs less to purchase a home than to rent…but too bad you can’t even do that because you can’t save up enough money for a down payment. And if your income isn’t high enough, you won’t even be able to get a mortgage.
Until 1968, the minimum wage not only kept pace with inflation, it rose in step with productivity growth. The logic is straightforward; we expect that wages in general will rise in step with productivity growth. For workers at the bottom to share in the overall improvement in society’s living standards, the minimum wage should also rise with productivity.
The distinction between inflation and productivity is an important one. If the minimum wage rises in step with inflation, we are effectively ensuring that it will allow minimum wage earners to buy the same amount of goods and services through time, protecting them against higher prices. However, if it rises with productivity that means that as workers are able to produce more goods and services per hour, on average, minimum wage earners will be able to buy more goods and services through time.While the national minimum wage did rise roughly in step with productivity growth from its inception in 1938 until 1968, in the more than five decades since then, it has not even kept pace with inflation. However, if the minimum wage did rise in step with productivity growth since 1968 it would be almost $21.50 an hour today, like you said.
My daughter, Zoe pays over $2,000 a month for a crappy 2-bedroom apartment without A/C or a dishwasher in a questionable neighborhood. Thank God she has a boyfriend to split the rent. It’s like this all over. Gone are the days when one parent in an average family could stay home with the kids while the other works. Anyway, it sucks and as long as our system favors the ultra wealthy – the employer over the employee – I don’t know how it changes.
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Mary, Thanks for your thoughtful response and for sharing what Zoe is going through and living with. Yes. It is all around. Agree with you that this system needs to change and should’ve, like decades ago. Thanks again for responding!
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