Cost of LivingCounty TestimonyFeaturedMinimum wage

City ‘living wage’ not only unsound but also not allowed by state law

The following testimony was submitted by the Grassroot Institute of Hawaii for consideration by the Honolulu Charter Commission on Dec. 15, 2025.
_____________

Dec. 15, 2025, 2:30 p.m.
Honolulu Hale

To: Honolulu Charter Commission
       Dawn Szewczyk, Chair
       Sommerset Yamamoto, Vice Chair

From: Grassroot Institute of Hawaii
            Ted Kefalas, Director of Strategic Campaigns

RE: P024 — RELATING TO A LIVING WAGE

Aloha Chair Szewczyk, Vice-Chair Yamamoto and other members of the Commission,

The Grassroot Institute of Hawaii opposes proposed Charter amendment P024, which would require the City Council to set a “living wage” level every five years to the extent allowed by state law.

Current state law does not allow the counties to set private-sector wage levels anyway— or “living wages,” as the proposal calls them — so that’s one problem with the proposal.

In any case, though minimum-wage laws often have the noble goal of trying to help folks struggling to get by, evidence suggests that instead they often result in less employment and higher prices.[1] Recent local news stories have highlighted the plight of small businesses trying to cope with the higher costs imposed by the state-level minimum wage hikes that have occurred recently.[2]

Thank you for the opportunity to testify.

Ted Kefalas
Director of Strategic Campaigns /Grassroot Institute of Hawaii
_____________

[1] Mónica Jiménez Martínez and Maribel Jiménez Martínez “Are the effects of minimum wage on the labour market the same across countries? A meta-analysis spanning a century,” Economic Systems, Vol. 25, Issue 1, March 2021; and Max Kunaschk, “The effects of minimum wages on employment and prices—Evidence from the hairdressing sector,” Labour Economics, Vol. 88, June 2024.
[2] Angela Cifone, “Hawaii small businesses struggle as costs and minimum wage rise,” KITV, Nov. 16, 2025; and Virginia Noone, “Hawaii’s climbing minimum wage forces layoffs at Polynesian Cultural Center,” Pacific Business News, Sept. 24, 2025.

Source link

Related Posts

1 of 74