Are you predicting that if the MW is raised to $10.10/hour the US economy will see 2 orders of magnitude inflation? Over what time period?
Predictions in science have to be specific enough to be proved right or wrong.
Also, can you show the work for your elasticity analysis.
Here's some scholarly information on the topic that might be relevant:
"Table 1 presents data on the wage costs of last three rounds of federal minimum wage increases: the 1990-91 increases (from $3.35 to $4.25); the 1996-97 increases (from $4.25 to $5.15); and the 2007- 2009 increases (from $5.15 to $7.25). Each of the annual increases in the statutory level of the minimum wage was in the range of about 10 percent per year (a low of 8.4 percent to a high of 13.6 percent – see column two). The average increase in the wage costs of affected workers, however, was in all cases smaller than the increase in the statutory rate, ranging from a low of 5.3 percent to a high of 9.4 percent (see next-to-last column). The lower average actual increase simply reflects that not all of the workers who receive a pay boost after a minimum-wage increase receive the full increase (because they are already earning something above the old federal minimum, but below the new federal minimum). Even more importantly, the total direct wage cost of each of these minimum-wage increases was tiny relative to the total wage bill paid by employers – consistently less than 0.1 percent of total wages paid. Relative to the wage costs of minimum-wage workers, the size of each recent minimum-wage increases was modest (between about 5 and 10 percent of total wage costs for minimum-wage workers).47 Relative to the total wage costs in the economy (that is including the wages of all employees, not just those earning the minimum wage), the wages costs of recent minimum-wage increases are very small.48
The size of these increases is directly relevant to the evaluation of possible channels of adjustment. For the typical minimum-wage increase, one or more of these alternative channels of adjustment – whether they are related to productivity increases, cuts in profits, reductions in earnings of higher earners, higher prices to consumers, or other mechanisms – must cope with what are relatively small total cost increases, when expressed as either a share of the total wages paid to minimum-wage workers or as a share of the total wages paid to all workers."
Skipping ahead:
"Employers may respond to a higher minimum wage by passing on the added costs to consumers in the form of higher prices. In a purely competitive economy, where all firms are experiencing the same increase in labor costs in response to a minimum-wage increase, economic theory predicts that at least a portion of the cost increase will be passed through to consumers.
Sara Lemos has conducted a comprehensive review of the 30 or so academic papers on the price effects of the minimum wage. She concludes: "Despite the different methodologies, data periods and data sources, most studies reviewed above found that a 10% US minimum wage increase raises food prices by no more than 4% and overall prices by no more than 0.4%"; and "[t]he main policy recommendation deriving from such findings is that policy makers can use the minimum wage to increase the wages of the poor, without destroying too many jobs or causing too much inflation."63 Neumark and Wascher agree with Lemos's assessment about the likely price effects (while disagreeing with her conclusions about the overall usefulness of the minimum wage): "Both because of the relatively small share of production costs accounted for by minimum wage labor and because of the limited spillovers from a minimum wage increase to wages of other workers, the effect of a minimum wage increase on the overall price level is likely to be small."64 Other recent research by Daniel Aaronson, Eric French, and James MacDonald on restaurant pricing, a sector with a high share of low-wage workers suggests that the price effects are likely to be lower than the upper bounds suggested by Lemos. Aaronson, French, and MacDonald "find that a 10 percent increase in the minimum wage increases prices by roughly 0.7 percent.""
You can read the entire document here
http://www.cepr.net/documents/publications/min-wage-2013-02.pdf