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- BUSINESS, Page 51Business NotesMINIMUM WAGEHow Much Is Just Enough?
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- Congress and President Bush both agree that the
- $3.35-an-hour minimum wage, which has not been raised since
- 1981, needs a boost. But a conflict is brewing over just how far
- to hike it. Had the wage kept pace with inflation, it would
- stand at $4.46 an hour today. Bush has threatened to veto any
- bill that provides a base rate of more than $4.25. Last week the
- House passed a measure that would gradually increase the wage
- to $4.55 by 1992. The Senate, scheduled to take up the issue
- next week, is unlikely to adopt a rate any closer to Bush's
- limit. Edward Kennedy, chairman of the Senate Labor and Human
- Resources Committee, has sponsored a proposal that would boost
- the rate to $4.65 an hour.
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- But a compromise may be possible. Democrats initially
- resisted Bush's demand that employers be allowed to pay their
- newest employees a subminimum, so-called training wage of $3.35
- during their first six months on the job. The House acquiesced
- but set a two-month limit on the training wage. If the Senate
- extends the subminimum to three months, Bush may decide to go
- along with a higher rate than he originally proposed.
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