The CBO says that if you raise the minimum wage to $10.10 an hour, “half a million people would lose their jobs.”

Former U.S. Sen. Rick Santorum, R-Pa., during comments Sunday on CNN’s “State of the Union”

Former U.S. Sen. Rick Santorum, R-Pa., criticized President Barack Obama’s proposal to raise the federal minimum wage to $10.10 on CNN’s “State of the Union.”

Santorum said he could support a smaller minimum-wage increase, but not the nearly $3 an hour boost the president and other Democrats are seeking.

“If you look at the CBO report, half a million people would lose their jobs as a result of the Obama minimum-wage increase,” Santorum said. “I’m talking more in the range of a dollar, phasing that in.”

Santorum didn’t respond to our request for comment, but we were able to find the February 2014 Congressional Budget Office report he was speaking about. Santorum is largely quoting the report correctly.

Obama’s proposed increase would take place in three steps, with the minimum hourly wage hitting $10.10 in 2016. It currently sits at $7.25, but many states choose to pay a higher minimum wage than federal policy mandates.

The CBO concluded if the federal government gradually increased the minimum wage to $10.10 an hour for all workers, and tied future increases to inflation, the economy would shed 500,000 jobs by the second half of 2016 (all things constant under current law). That’s about 0.3 percent of the workforce. The CBO reached its conclusion, figuring:

  • Higher wages increase companies' production costs. In turn, that lowers the amount of goods and services produced. That means companies need to employ fewer workers.
  • Raising the cost of employing low-wage workers encourages companies to focus more on other, more cost-effective ways of producing goods and services: machines, technology and employing productive higher-wage workers.

The one thing that Santorum didn’t note is that the 500,000-job estimate is just that, an estimate. Job losses could range from hardly any, all the way up to 1 million. It pegged 500,000 jobs as its “central estimate.”

That’s not to say the CBO report had only bad news about Obama’s proposal. The report also noted that about 16.5 million workers would see their wages go up.

Our ruling

Santorum said if the United States raises the minimum wage to $10.10 an hour, “half a million people would lose their jobs.” Santorum said “would,” but really the 500,000-job figure was the CBO’s best guess. Analysts say job losses could be anywhere from just a few workers to as many as 1 million.

Santorum’s statement is accurate but needs clarification. We rate it Mostly True.