04/11/2014
Matt Dietrich
Debate over the minimum wage is all the rage at the moment at both the federal and state levels. Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn has made raising Illinois’ minimum wage from $8.25 an hour to $10 a major plank in his reelection campaign platform.
President Barack Obama advocates doing the same at the federal level, which now has a $7.25 minimum wage.
The tug-of-war on this issue is intense. While the Congressional Budget Office issued a report saying raising the federal minimum wage would hurt job creation, proponents say it’s a necessary step to ensuring that all full-time workers can make a “living wage.”
But as the graphic below illustrates, “living wage” is a highly relative term. Specifically, it’s relative to where you live. This interactive map breaks it down to the county level in each state. Note the difference in what constitutes a living wage in, for example, Massac County in far southern Illinois and Cook County.
Posted with permission from accountingschoolguide.com.
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Matthew Dietrich is Reboot’s executive editor. An award-winning journalist, Dietrich is the former editorial page editor of the State Journal Register in Springfield. He believes in holding our politicians accountable. Read Dietrich’s take on the leadership vacuum that sent Illinois sinking. You can find Reboot on Facebook at and on Twitter @rebootillinois.