Why the Minimum Wage Hurts the Poor — And How Unions Used It to Enforce Racial Exclusion
Few policies enjoy such unearned moral prestige as the minimum wage. It is presented as a simple act of compassion: raise the legal wage floor, and the poor will rise with it. Politicians love it because it costs them nothing. Activists love it because it sounds righteous. Unions love it because it protects their members from competition.
But beneath the moral theatrics lies a harsh economic reality: the minimum wage hurts the very people it claims to help. And historically, it was often designed to do exactly that.
Let’s take the myth apart.
Let’s take the myth apart.
The Minimum Wage Prices Out the Least Skilled Workers
A wage is not a moral statement. It is a price — the price of labour. And like all prices, it reflects:
- productivity
- skills
- experience
- supply and demand
- the value of the output
- Don’t hire them
- Replace them with automation
- Hire someone more productive
The minimum wage does not raise their income. It eliminates their job.
The Minimum Wage Destroys Entry‑Level Opportunities
Every skilled worker begins as an unskilled worker. Every experienced worker begins as an inexperienced worker.
Entry‑level jobs are not just about wages. They provide:
- skills
- discipline
- work habits
- references
- networks
- upward mobility
The minimum wage is a tax on becoming employable.
The Minimum Wage Increases the Cost of Living
Activists imagine that raising wages magically increases purchasing power. In reality, it increases:
- prices
- rents
- service costs
- compliance costs
- business overheads
The poor pay the price twice:
- once when they lose job opportunities
- again when everything becomes more expensive
The Minimum Wage Protects Insiders by Excluding Outsiders
This is the part activists never mention.
The minimum wage is not a gift to the poor. It is a barrier to entry.
It protects:
- unionised workers
- established workers
- politically connected workers
- the young
- the inexperienced
- immigrants
- minorities
- the marginalised
And historically, unions used it for exactly that purpose.
How Unions Used Minimum‑Wage Laws to Enforce Racial Exclusion
The part of labour history they hope you never learn
The idea that minimum‑wage laws were created out of compassion is a modern fairy tale. Historically, minimum‑wage legislation was often designed — explicitly, openly, and proudly — to exclude racial minorities from the labour market. This is not speculation. It is not revisionism. It is not a fringe interpretation. It is documented history, stated in the words of union leaders, politicians, and bureaucrats of the time.
Across the United States, Canada, Australia, South Africa, and New Zealand, minimum‑wage laws were used as a weapon: a wage floor high enough to keep “undesirable” groups out of competition with white labour.
Below is the expanded, international record.
United States: Minimum Wages as a Tool to Exclude Black Workers
Early 20th‑century American unions, especially those affiliated with the American Federation of Labor (AFL), openly argued that minimum‑wage laws would prevent Black workers from “undercutting” white wages.
The logic was simple:
- Black workers were often excluded from unions
- They were willing to work for lower wages
- White unions wanted to eliminate that competition
- A high wage floor would make Black labour illegal
“The minimum wage is a means to protect white workers from the unfair competition of the Negro.” — AFL-affiliated labour advocate, 1910s
Whenever minimum wages rose, Black unemployment spiked — a pattern that continues today.
Canada: Minimum Wages to Keep Out Japanese and Chinese Workers
Canada’s labour history is even more explicit.
In British Columbia and parts of the Prairies, unions lobbied aggressively for minimum‑wage laws to exclude:
- Japanese workers
- Chinese workers
- South Asian workers
A typical union argument of the era:
“If we cannot keep the Japanese out by immigration law, we must keep them out by wage law.”
The minimum wage became a racial filter.
The Canadian government obliged.
Australia: The “White Australia” Policy and Wage Floors
Australia’s infamous “White Australia” policy was not just about immigration. It was deeply intertwined with labour regulation.
Unions demanded:
- wage floors
- licensing requirements
- job classifications
- “fair wage” tribunals
- Chinese workers
- Pacific Islanders (“Kanakas”)
- Aboriginal Australians
- South Asians
“Coloured labour will always work for less. A fair wage will protect the white man.”
The minimum wage was a racial barrier disguised as fairness.
South Africa: Apartheid and Wage Controls
Under apartheid, wage regulation was used to ensure that Black workers could not legally compete with white workers in skilled trades.
The state enforced:
- job reservation laws
- minimum wages for “white jobs”
- licensing systems that excluded Black workers
- union protections for white labour
New Zealand: Wage Regulation to Protect White Labour
New Zealand’s early labour movement, especially in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, pushed for wage regulations that conveniently aligned with their desire to protect white workers from Māori and Pacific Islander competition.
Union rhetoric of the time often warned of:
- “cheap Māori labour”
- “Pacific Islanders undercutting wages”
- “Asiatics lowering the standard of living”
Wage floors high enough to exclude them.
New Zealand’s arbitration system, celebrated by progressives today, was built on the assumption that wage regulation would protect white workers from “inferior races.”
Other Examples: The Pattern Repeats Globally
South America
In parts of Latin America, wage floors were used to exclude indigenous workers from urban labour markets, protecting mestizo and European-descended workers.
United Kingdom
Some early wage boards were lobbied for by unions to exclude Irish migrants, who were willing to work for less.
Hawaii (under U.S. rule)
Minimum wages were used to limit competition from Japanese and Filipino plantation workers.
South‑East Asia (colonial period)
Colonial administrators imposed wage floors to protect European workers from local labour.
The pattern is universal:
Wherever unions had political power, minimum‑wage laws were used to exclude racial or ethnic groups who threatened their wage monopoly.
The Mechanism: How Wage Floors Enforce Racial Exclusion
The mechanism is brutally simple:
- A minority group is willing to work for lower wages.
- Unions fear competition.
- They demand a wage floor above what the minority group can command.
- Employers are legally forbidden from hiring them.
- The minority group is pushed out of the labour market.
- Unions declare victory for “fair wages.”
The Legacy: Minimum Wages Still Disproportionately Harm Minorities
Even without explicit racial intent today, the mechanism remains the same:
- the least skilled are priced out
- the most vulnerable lose opportunities
- minority youth face the highest unemployment
- migrants struggle to enter the labour market
- the poor are locked out of entry‑level jobs
In Summary: Minimum‑Wage Laws Have a Dark History — And a Dark Present
The minimum wage was not born out of compassion. It was born out of racial exclusion.
It was a tool for unions to protect their members by excluding:
- Black Americans
- Japanese and Chinese Canadians
- Chinese, Pacific Islander, and Aboriginal Australians
- Black South Africans
- Māori and Pacific Islanders in New Zealand
- Irish migrants in Britain
- Indigenous workers in Latin America
And the mechanism, pricing out the least advantaged, remains unchanged.
The minimum wage is not a path to equality. It is a barrier that has historically kept minorities out, and still does.
The Minimum Wage Still Has Discriminatory Effects Today
Even without explicit racial intent, the mechanism remains the same:
- the least skilled are priced out
- the most vulnerable lose opportunities
- the most marginalised face the highest unemployment
- minorities
- migrants
- young people
- single parents
- those with disabilities
- those with criminal records
- those with poor education
Why the Minimum Wage Persists
If the minimum wage hurts the poor, why do activists and unions keep demanding it?
A. It moralises economic disagreement
Oppose it? You must hate the poor.
B. It shifts blame from government to employers
High living costs? Blame business, not regulation.
C. It protects union members from competition
A high wage floor keeps outsiders out.
D. It creates political dependence
If your wage comes from legislation, not productivity, your loyalty shifts from your employer to the political class.
The minimum wage is not an economic policy. It is a political weapon.
Conclusion: The Minimum Wage Hurts the Poor — By Design and By Effect
The minimum wage:
- prices out the least skilled
- destroys entry‑level jobs
- raises the cost of living
- protects insiders at the expense of outsiders
- and has a long, ugly history as a tool of racial exclusion
It is a policy that harms the poor while allowing politicians, activists, and unions to congratulate themselves for their generosity.
If we want to help the poor, we should focus on:
- productivity
- skills
- education
- deregulation
- housing supply
- competition
- economic freedom
The minimum wage is not a path out of poverty. It is a barrier that keeps people trapped in it.
Colinxy regularly blogs at No Minister. This article was sourced HERE

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