And there are substantially more of them.
That’s according to a new report released by
Chicago-based Women Employed and Action Now Institute that shows nearly
one in six low-wage workers here last year held a college degree.
The report, authored by Marc Doussard, assistant
professor in the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign’s Department
of Urban and Regional Planning, defines low-wage workers as those
making $12 an hour or less.
The report revealed the share of payroll employees
ages 18 to 64 working in low-wage jobs rose from 23.8 percent in 2001 to
31.2 percent last year. That’s a more than a 30 percent rise in the
proportion of such workers.
Meanwhile the share of households with a low-wage
earner that got all income from low-wage earnings rose from 45.7 percent
to 56.7 percent. That’s evidence more people are relying more on those
dollars to meet basic needs rather than for disposable income. READ MORE: http://www.suntimes.com/15379932-761/low-wage-work-force-grows-30-as-the-number-of-jobs-shrinks.html
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