Tuesday, February 11, 2014

The Main Think Tank Fighting Minimum Wage Hike

The New York Times is reporting that the main think tank fighting a minimum wage hike is run by a public relations firm for the restaurant industry.

Here is more:
Just four blocks from the White House is the headquarters of the Employment Policies Institute, a widely quoted economic research center whose academic reports have repeatedly warned that increasing the minimum wage could be harmful, increasing poverty and unemployment.
But something fundamental goes unsaid in the institute’s reports: The nonprofit group is run by a public relations firm that also represents the restaurant industry, as part of a tightly coordinated effort to defeat the minimum wage increase that the White House and Democrats in Congress have pushed for.
The left has its own prominent groups, like the Center for American Progress and the Economic Policy Institute, whose donors include nearly 20 labor unions, and whose reports, with their own aura of objectivity, consistently conclude that raising the minimum wage makes good economic sense. But none has played such a prominent and multifaceted role in recent months as the conservative Employment Policies Institute.
The Employment Policies Institute, founded two decades ago, is led by the advertising and public relations executive Richard B. Berman, who has made millions of dollars in Washington by taking up the causes of corporate America. He has repeatedly created official-sounding nonprofit groups like the Center for Consumer Freedom that have challenged limits like the ban on indoor smoking and the push to restrict calorie counts in fast foods.
The sign at the entrance is for Berman and Company, as the Employment Policies Institute has no employees of its own. Mr. Berman’s for-profit advertising firm, instead, “bills” the nonprofit institute for the services his employees provide to the institute. This arrangement effectively means that the nonprofit is a moneymaking venture for Mr. Berman, whose advertising firm was paid $1.1 million by the institute in 2012, according to its tax returns, or 44 percent of its total budget, with most of the rest of the money used to buy advertisements.

Employment Policies Institute (EPI) was founded in 1991, and should not be confused with another think tank - the Economic Policy Institute (mentioned in the NYTimes article), which also goes by the acronym EPI.  Employment Policies Institute was not ranked in the recently released University of Pennsylvania think tank rankings.

The Washington Post has recently labeled the Employment Policies Institute a "conservative think tank," and The Wall Street Journal has recently labeled it a "right-wing think tank."

Here is what Slate has to say about Berman and Co. and its "network of 'think tanks.'"