Obama's Demand for Wage Rules for Salaried Workers Will Have Far More Impact Than Proposed Minimum Wage Changes

The $10.10 minimum wage discussion has gotten a lot of attention.   But in 2011 only 3.8 million workers made at or below the minimum wage, and of these, at least half earn substantially more in reality through tips.

Obama's announcement yesterday that he wanted to substantially change the way salaried workers will likely have far more negative impacts on employment than his minimum wage proposals.

President Barack Obama is expected to order a rule change this week that would require employers to pay overtime to a larger number of salaried workers, two people familiar with the matter said.

Currently, many businesses aren't required to pay overtime to certain salaried workers if they earn more than $455 a week, a level that was set in 2004 and comes to roughly $24,000 a year. The White House is expected to direct the Labor Department to raise that salary threshold, though it is unclear by how much.

Ross Eisenbrey, vice president of the liberal Economic Policy Institute, and Jared Bernstein, a former White House economist, recently proposed the limit be increased to $984 a week, or roughly $50,000 a year.

"That would mean between five- and 10-million people could be affected, but they might choose a lower number," Mr. Eisenbrey said about the White House plans.

5-10 million is potentially 3x or more the people affected by a minimum wage change.  But in some sense, this still underestimates the impact.  Here is one example.  Last year the average starting salary of college graduates is about $45,000.  The median is likely lower.  This means that over half of all college graduates going into the work force will be taking hourly jobs that used to be salaried.   Teachers will be hourly.  Budget analysts will be hourly.  Etc.

So all these folks are saying - Yeah!  I get overtime!   Wrong.  They will be eligible for overtime.  But companies will quickly restructure their work processes to make sure no one works overtime.  And since their new hires are working just a straight 40 hours (with mandatory unpaid lunch break time in CA), they will likely pay less.   If I am paying $40,000 a year for someone who will work extra hours for me, I am not going to pay that amount to someone just punching a time clock.  And the whole psychological relationship is changed - a salaried person is someone on the management team.  A person punching a timeclock may not be treated the same way.

Further, when someone gets switched from salary to hourly, they lose a minimum pay guarantee.  When I get a $3,500 a month offer, I know that no matter how slow things are, until I am fired I get $3500 a month.  There is a floor on my earnings.  As an hourly worker, my hours can be adjusted up or down constantly.  There is no floor at all.

Oh, and by the way, remember Obamacare?  The PPACA penalizes companies who do not provide a health plan that meets certain (expensive) criteria.  But that penalty is not applied for workers who are "part-time" or work less than 30 hours a week.  Salaried workers are automatically full time.  But once you convert all those people to hourly and make sure they are working no more than 40 hours a week, is it really so large a step to getting them under 30 hours a week?

PS-  Well, for those who think schools assign too much homework, this could well be the end of homework.  The most dangerous possible thing with hourly workers is to give them the ability to assign themselves unlimited overtime.  Teachers could do this at home with grading papers.  If I were a school, I would ban teachers from doing any grading or schoolwork prep at home -- after all, it's hourly and probably overtime and they could work unlimited hours at home and how would you get it under control?  The only way to manage it would be to ban it entirely.

PPS- What about travel?  Would you ever let workers paid hourly travel?  You would have to pay all the travel time and maybe part of the hotel time and there would be huge potential for ending up with overtime bills so better to just ban travel all together.  I know this seems knee-jerk to ban something that might impose a lot of extra labor costs seems extreme, but just look at California.  In California, employees have the right to a half-hour lunch break without work.  They can work through lunch if they choose, but courts have imposed enough onerous reporting standards around this that most companies (like mine) have just banned working through lunch.  It is a firing offense in my company, and in many others in CA, to be caught working during lunch.  We are going to see the same thing working from home.  In fact, we already see this, as there are class actions right now against companies who provided employees with cell phones saying that giving them a cell phone put them "on call" and subject to overtime hours that had to paid at home.  Companies are now making it a firing offense to take one's company cell phone home.

Sorry this post is so disorganized, but this initiative caught be by surprise and I have not been thinking about it for very long.  I will try to work out a more rigorous article in the next few weeks.

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You forgot one more option: "to hell with this, I'm moving my operation to China." Expect to see even more exporting of US jobs overseas.

I am now retired, but I worked for 25 years for a California company that everyone (and I mean EVERYONE) would recognize. I was salaried and paid extremely well (especially when you consider benefits and stock options). When I signed on, I knew, my employer knew, and my co-workers knew, that my hours were never to be monitored. All that mattered was hitting the schedule, as this company lives and dies by schedules. I never once questioned my commitment to the company and its products. To say "I was part of the team that made that sucker" was, and still is, a badge of honor and courage. If I had to give up a Fourth Of July long weekend to help facilitate the product's introduction, so be it. When they sent me overseas as part of the products' bring-up, did I complain? Did I expect to be paid for my travel time? Hell, no. The important thing was to work out the products' kinks and see our CEO up there on stage showing it off.

The really weird thing about this is that the CEO was a HUGE believer in the communist-in-chief and supported him (politically). I now wonder what will happen under these new regulations, as they will utterly destroy the way they engineer their products.

If I'm the CEO of a company these days, I'd throw in the towel and move all of my engineering and manufacturing overseas, probably China.

China is now a far more capitalist-friendly country than is Obama's Amerika.

Did you read the part where this only applies to people who make under $50K per year?

(It's still bad, but it won't affect California computer engineers.)

Once again our liberal government is providing a disincentive for work. It glorifies not working and it throws a monkey wrench in employers ability run a flexible operation. Will airline time for a salesman/woman for a national company be on the clock? Overtime for a delayed flight? This is madness by a person who never worked in private industry in his life.

I'm sorry to hear that. I figured it was maybe someone worried about the rules w/out realizing that it's really a matter of how your boss enforces them.

I agree with you but I'd imagine there are a few geeky types who would point out you only have to be able to get to the electronic time card. And if that's on a server somewhere, once just needs to find a way into the domain that has access to it. =-)

not working = freedom, right? ;)

I worked for the NLRB in Alaska for 25
years. Like Calif, Alaska mandates OT pay after 8 hrs in a day,
along with over 40 in a week. I heard of a case where a small shop
of 8 or 10 employees begged the boss to switch to a 4-10s summer
schedule, to allow more fishing time. The employees all swore they
would take no OT in order to get the days off. All went well for several
years, until one guy got disgruntled and quit. He then filed a
wage/hour claim, and the boss got stuck with thousands in back pay
and penalties, along with hefty legal fees.

Hacking your employer is even more of a firing offense than falsifying your timesheet.

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He's best buddies with Alinsky. No one who's read Alinsky could ever believe it's an accident.

We'll never impeach him successfully. But I do insist that the next administration prosecute him.

In the federal rule, it does make otherwise exempt employees non-exempt. In the California version, it doesn't.

Does who want a workforce that is treated like adults or like teenagers?

The nanny-statists don't consider anyone to be an adult except themselves.

Government enforcement is a bigger worry for large companies than employee cheating. A large company that lets an employee work "unofficial flex-time" and gets caught can be fined 6 figures, because the inspector will assume it's common practice. Likewise if one disgruntled employee quits and sues afterward. You can't afford to trust and not verify.