![Bank of America hikes its U.S. minimum wage to $21 an hour](https://cbsnews3.cbsistatic.com/hub/i/r/2014/03/24/dae60b7b-e16d-49de-9c90-d61498c1e98a/thumbnail/1200x630/cfc307aa0be8c24b247a929602aed9b1/bank.jpg)
Bank of America hikes its U.S. minimum wage to $21 an hour
CBSN
Bank of America is now paying its U.S. workforce at least $21 an hour — or nearly three times the federal minimum wage of $7.25, which has not budged in a dozen years even though a majority of Americans support an increase.
The pay hike announced by the nation's second-biggest bank on Wednesday follows BofA's May pledge to pay its workers a minimum hourly wage of $25 by 2025. The Charlotte, North Carolina-based lender is also requiring its U.S. vendors pay their workers who are dedicated to the bank's business at least $15 an hour.
BofA's pay hike impacts a sizable number of its 174,000 workers in the U.S. and continues a trajectory that began with the bank raising its hourly minimum to $15 in 2017, then to $17 in 2019 and to $20 last year.
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