Why is it that wherever minimum wage is highest, the cost of living is highest?
- By Fantine
- American Politics
- 14 Replies
Pennsylvania and Virginia aren't low cost state, and neither are many parts of Texas and Georgia.States with federal minimum wage ($7.25/hour) Minimum-Wage.org+1
- Alaska: $14.00 (effective July 1, 2026)
- Arizona: $15.15
- Arkansas: $11.00 (for employers with 4+ employees; $7.25 for fewer than 4)
- California: $16.90
- Colorado: $15.16
- Connecticut: $16.94
- Delaware: $15.00
- District of Columbia: $17.00
- Hawaii: $14.00
- Maine: $14.15
- Maryland: $15.00
- Massachusetts: $15.00
- Michigan: $10.33
- Minnesota: $10.85
- Nebraska: $12.00
- Nevada: $12.00
- New Jersey: $15.92 (6+ employees) / $14.23 (fewer than 6)
- New York: $17.00 (NYC, Long Island, Westchester) / $16.00 (rest of state)
- Oregon: $16.30 (Portland metro) / $15.05 (standard) / $14.05 (non-urban)
- Pennsylvania: $7.25 (federal applies)
- Rhode Island: $16.00
- South Dakota: $11.85
- Vermont: $14.42
- Virginia: $12.77
- Washington: $17.13
- Washington, D.C.: $17.00
- Alabama, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, New Hampshire, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia (some localities higher)
It would be more accurate to assess poverty levels to see whether wages in certain states are adequate or inadequate. I imagine most minimum wages are inadequate--but how inadequate.
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