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Szczegółowy przewodnik wkrótce
Pracujemy nad kompleksowym przewodnikiem edukacyjnym dla Minimum Wage Living Calculator. Wróć wkrótce po wyjaśnienia krok po kroku, wzory, przykłady z życia i porady ekspertów.
The Minimum Wage Living Calculator compares monthly gross income at any specified hourly wage (federal minimum $7.25, or state/city minimums up to $20+ in some California cities) to essential monthly expenses — rent, food, transportation, utilities, healthcare — to determine whether a worker can financially survive on minimum wage in a given city. Federal minimum wage has been $7.25/hour since 2009; with 2009–2024 cumulative inflation of ~40%, it's worth roughly $5.20 in 2009 dollars. MIT's Living Wage Calculator finds federal minimum is below the living wage threshold in 100% of US counties for any household with children. The calculator structure: enter hourly wage, hours per week (40 standard, less for many minimum wage workers due to scheduling), and five expense categories. Monthly gross income = wage × hours × 52 / 12. After-tax estimate = gross × 0.85 (typical 10–15% effective federal + state + FICA for low earners after standard deduction and EITC). Surplus or shortfall = after-tax minus total expenses. Calculator outputs viability assessment plus dollar surplus/deficit. Real context for inputs: Rent for a 1-bedroom in median US city is ~$1,200–1,600 (Apartment List); high-cost cities $2,000–3,500. USDA Thrifty Food Plan for one adult is ~$300–400/month. Public transit pass $80–150/month; car ownership including insurance, gas, depreciation $400–800/month. Utilities (electric, gas, internet, phone) $200–300. Healthcare with employer insurance $150–400 employee contribution; without insurance $400–800 marketplace plan after ACA subsidies. Who benefits: minimum wage workers planning relocation, advocacy groups documenting the living wage gap, policymakers evaluating wage floor legislation, parents helping kids understand affordability of cities, journalists writing about cost of living. The math typically shows minimum wage workers run $200–800 monthly deficits in median US cities — explaining the prevalence of multiple jobs, public assistance, and informal housing arrangements among low-wage workers. Federal poverty line for one adult is ~$15,060 (2024), meaning a full-time federal minimum wage worker ($7.25 × 2080 = $15,080) sits exactly at the poverty line — a deliberate political choice in 1938 that has not been updated.
Monthly After-Tax = Hourly × Hours × 52 / 12 × 0.85; Surplus = After-Tax − Σ Expenses
- 1Step 1 — Enter your hourly wage (or compare your state/city's minimum wage)
- 2Step 2 — Enter weekly hours (40 if full-time, often 25–35 for many minimum wage retail/food service)
- 3Step 3 — Enter monthly rent based on your target city (use Apartment List, Zillow, or HUD Fair Market Rent)
- 4Step 4 — Enter monthly food, transportation, utilities, and healthcare estimates
- 5Step 5 — Calculator computes monthly gross income = wage × hours × 52/12
- 6Step 6 — Applies ~15% effective tax rate for after-tax income (typical for low earners)
- 7Step 7 — Compares after-tax income to total expenses; outputs surplus, deficit, and viability assessment
$7.25 × 40 × 52/12 = $1,257 gross; after-tax $1,068. Expenses exceed income by over $1,000/month — explains why minimum wage workers need roommates, family support, or multiple jobs.
Living wage minimum starts around $15/hr in median-cost US cities — and that's tight, with no savings buffer.
Even California's $20 fast food minimum doesn't cover SF cost of living without roommates or government subsidy.
Combined household achieves viability — explains prevalence of multi-earner low-wage households
Personal viability assessment before relocation
Advocacy and policy documentation
Parent-child conversations about city affordability
Living wage research and journalism
Voter education on wage legislation
Comparing job offers across cities at low-wage tier
Why hasn't federal minimum wage increased since 2009?
Congressional gridlock. The Raise the Wage Act (proposed multiple sessions) would increase to $15/hour by 2025; passes House regularly but stalls in Senate. State and city governments have stepped in — 30 states + DC have minimums above $7.25, with California, Washington, New York at $15.50–20+. Federal minimum applies only in states without higher minimums (Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, South Carolina, Tennessee — and tipped workers everywhere).
What about EITC and other tax credits?
Earned Income Tax Credit can refund several thousand dollars for low-wage workers with children — meaningfully affecting annualized take-home but not monthly cash flow during the year. The calculator's 15% effective tax rate accounts for typical EITC benefit; for childless adults, EITC is much smaller and effective rate is closer to 20%. Use IRS EITC Assistant for precise figures.
What's a living wage vs minimum wage?
Minimum wage is the legal floor employers must pay. Living wage is the hourly rate needed to meet basic needs in a specific location without public assistance. MIT Living Wage Calculator (livingwage.mit.edu) calculates location-specific living wages — typically $16–28/hour for a single adult depending on cost of living, much higher with dependents. Living wage exceeds minimum wage in 100% of US counties.
Why is healthcare so expensive at minimum wage?
Minimum wage workers rarely get employer insurance, leaving ACA marketplace at $200–500/month after subsidies for individuals or Medicaid where eligible (under ~$20,120 single adult income, 2024). Medicaid eligibility varies by state — 10 states declined ACA expansion creating a coverage gap where workers earn too much for traditional Medicaid but too little for marketplace subsidies. Healthcare access is a major source of low-wage worker financial fragility.
Should minimum wage be raised?
Calculator presents data, not policy advocacy. Economic research splits: most studies of moderate increases (to $10–12) find minimal employment impact; large jumps (to $20+) generate more debate. CBO 2021 estimated $15 federal minimum would lift 900k out of poverty but cost 1.4M jobs. The math in this calculator suggests current federal minimum is clearly inadequate for solo viability in median US cities; how to address that is the policy question.
Wskazówka Pro
Use HUD Fair Market Rent data (hud.gov) for your target zip code — it's the most realistic baseline for rent. Avoid using national averages for high-cost cities or rural data for urban areas. The biggest source of error in living-wage calculations is using rent figures from the wrong locality.