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At the forefront, San Francisco has raised the minimum wage in addition to providing city-wide health insurance coverage. Seattle, New York and now Chicago are considering similar action. A newly published book, When Mandates Work, co-edited by Ken Jacobs, examines San Francisco's minimum wage experiment. Jacobs is chair of the Center for Labor Research and Education at the University of California, Berkeley. The 2004-2011 study saw no harmful economic effects to the local economy. Overall private employment grew by 5.6 percent. Food service employment, a group most likely effected by minimum wage laws, grew by 17.7 percent, the highest rate among Bay Area counties.
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