Re: Strands in the Tapestry: the Business, Economics, and Tax Policy Thread
Sorry, but this is just [adjective]. By this reasoning everyone would be working for the minimum wage, and obviously many people are paid much more than that.
You want to earn more than the minimum wage, find a way to make what you do valuable to other people.
There are exceptions to minimum wage laws IIRC, waiters / waitresses who receive tip income, children under 18.
There's an abundance of evidence that, when controlled for other factors, an increase in the minimum wage tends to reduce employment for low-skilled workers who produce value only at (or below) that wage level.
Of course, when has evidence ever affected your thinking?
For people who are lucky enough to get / retain jobs, then of course those lucky ones are undeniably better off.
it seems to me that the key question would be the gap between minimum wage / employment compared to the "wage" you are paid sitting around doing nothing. there is ample evidence that extended unemployment benefits contribute to higher unemployment, because people turn down jobs that they are qualified to hold merely because accepting it would require them to accept less pay than they were receiving before they were laid off.
Fundamentally we will talk about "entitlement" and whether every college graduate should have a higher minimum wage than any high school graduate merely because of the difference in education.
EDIT: many people think they are "entitled" to keep receiving the same rate of pay even when the marketplace changes. if I used to be the best typewriter repairmen ever, and suddenly no one wants to use typewriters any more, am I "entitled" to keep getting paid what I used to get? or "must" I learn a new skill and go out into the labor market and get paid what that new skill is worth instead? That is the crux of the argument for both sides: one side says, "it only makes sense that you get paid what you are 'worth' in terms of productivity" the other side says "I 'deserve' to get paid a minimum amount, whether I actually am 'worth it' or not."
I'd prefer the current system lest people start working for slave wages. Think of the federal minimum wage as a way to keep people off the govt dole. Once that's established states can then go their own way above that if they choose to. Some people worship China's society. I don't. I don't see a reason to emulate their compensation for their workers.
Sorry, but this is just [adjective]. By this reasoning everyone would be working for the minimum wage, and obviously many people are paid much more than that.
You want to earn more than the minimum wage, find a way to make what you do valuable to other people.
There are exceptions to minimum wage laws IIRC, waiters / waitresses who receive tip income, children under 18.
There's an abundance of evidence that, when controlled for other factors, an increase in the minimum wage tends to reduce employment for low-skilled workers who produce value only at (or below) that wage level.
Of course, when has evidence ever affected your thinking?
For people who are lucky enough to get / retain jobs, then of course those lucky ones are undeniably better off.
it seems to me that the key question would be the gap between minimum wage / employment compared to the "wage" you are paid sitting around doing nothing. there is ample evidence that extended unemployment benefits contribute to higher unemployment, because people turn down jobs that they are qualified to hold merely because accepting it would require them to accept less pay than they were receiving before they were laid off.
Fundamentally we will talk about "entitlement" and whether every college graduate should have a higher minimum wage than any high school graduate merely because of the difference in education.
EDIT: many people think they are "entitled" to keep receiving the same rate of pay even when the marketplace changes. if I used to be the best typewriter repairmen ever, and suddenly no one wants to use typewriters any more, am I "entitled" to keep getting paid what I used to get? or "must" I learn a new skill and go out into the labor market and get paid what that new skill is worth instead? That is the crux of the argument for both sides: one side says, "it only makes sense that you get paid what you are 'worth' in terms of productivity" the other side says "I 'deserve' to get paid a minimum amount, whether I actually am 'worth it' or not."
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