Obama Could Boost Wages for Millions Through Overtime Eligibility

“It may even be bigger than increasing the minimum wage,” union official said.

— -- The Obama administration is poised to give potentially millions of low and middle-income American workers a raise.

Some economists and labor advocates say the move would be one of the boldest government actions to boost workers' wages in years.

Currently, employers are required to pay “time-and-a-half” for each hour of work above 40 hours per week to workers making less than $23,660 per year – a federal threshold that has not been adjusted to keep pace with inflation since the 1970s.

President Obama first directed the Labor Department to look at updating the rules governing overtime pay last year.

The administration has reportedly considered raising that threshold to $51,000, which would account for inflation, though neither the White House nor Labor Department would confirm details of the proposed increase.

Certain salaried workers making as little as $455 per week are not currently entitled to overtime pay by law. That would change with this move.

Not everyone thinks this is a good idea, including many House Republicans and business groups who say it will raise wage costs and result in fewer jobs.

The House Education and Workforce committee will review federal wage and hour standards during a hearing on Wednesday, with the Republican majority on the panel scrutinizing the “complex, burdensome, and outdated” regulatory system created by the 1970s-era Fair Labor Standards Act, which sets overtime protections.

“Such a modification [to the federal overtime rules] would curb a manager’s critical ability to multitask in a busy restaurant setting, undermine customer service, limit training opportunities for team members, diminish morale and force complicated assessments of time spent ‘managing’ in a restaurant setting,” Richardson will say, according to excerpts of his testimony obtained by ABC News.

“[They] would impose immense costs on chain restaurants and would stifle opportunities for career advancement for hourly associates who wish to manage our restaurants,” he will say.

News of the pending Labor Department action was first reported by Politico.

ABC News' Devin Dwyer and Ali Weinberg contributed to this report.