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by cwyers 3283 days ago
> Really if I'm going to be honest, I think the UW study reaffirms your pre-existing views so you're unlikely to admit that it's a bad study but come on.

I could say the obverse about about you, but it doesn't really move the discussion forward.

You said you thought it was a bad study because of the multi-site issue. I responded why I didn't believe that to be the case. You responded that it was a bad study because of the $19 cut-off. Do you still think the multi-site issue is a problem, given my response?

1 comments

Yes. The multi-site issue combined with the $19/hr problem prevent the study from being very useful.

Given this quote:

This pattern of average higher pay and more employment appears also in food services: a decline of about 150 jobs paying under $19 from 2014 to 2016 and a simultaneous increase of about 4,500 jobs in all pay levels at single-site food service establishments.

Would you concede the possibility that in Seattle's restaurant sector a higher minimum wage did not have negative employment effects? (NOTE: I edited this question)

I've never not conceded that possibility! From the abstract of the UW study:

> We estimate an effect of zero when analyzing employment in the restaurant industry at all wage levels, comparable to many prior studies.