In March each year, the Census Bureau conducts a special survey of many of the same U.S. households that make up the monthly jobs report. Respondents are asked about the size of the company they work for, and the responses are then sorted into six categories ranging from fewer than 10 employees to 1,000 or more.
In a recent analysis, the Employment Policies Institute used this data to determine the size of a typical minimum-wage employer. Contrary to the rhetoric of organized labor and its allies, the vast majority of people earning the minimum wage aren't working at large corporations with 1,000 or more employees. Roughly half the minimum-wage workforce is employed at businesses with fewer than 100 employees, and 40% are at very small businesses with fewer than 50 employees.
The results are similar even if you ... broaden the analysis from minimum wage employees earning $7.25 an hour to "low-wage" employees earning $10 an hour or less: 46% still work for businesses with 100 or fewer employees.
I've been reading Daniel Kahneman's book, Thinking Fast and Slow. Amazing stuff. It's quite revelatory to learn about how our minds work.
One of his most important findings is that we all tend to drastically overweight experience based on small sample sizes (in other words, our intuitive understanding of statistics is worse than terrible, it is actually misleading). A small sample size means it is too tiny to draw any meaningful generalizations, yet we all tend to generalize based on a few, or even just one, experience anyway. (how many times have we heard a person say "Company X? their customer support sucks!" and find out it is based on one bad experience).
What I found quite striking was that, for kidney cancer, the counties with the lowest per capital incidence are small rural counties. And, for kidney cancer, the counties with the highest per capita incidence are small rural counties.
Our minds insist on supplying a "reason" or an "explanation" for this data based on intuition, association, and inference. Yet what this data "really" indicates is that kidney cancer is relatively rare, and so if you have a small population, the difference of just one or two incidents will skew the results substantially.
In other words, if you flip a coin three times, the chances are one in four that the result will be all heads or all tails. If you flip a coin seven time, the chances are one in sixty-four that the result will be all heads or all tails. Yet our mind says, "wow, one in four! something significant must be going on here!" for the first data point, yet our mind also says "meh, one in sixty-four, no big deal" for the second data point....yet it is exactly the same baseline data set in both cases!
I suspect that much of the polarization we see today comes from people who cannot imagine that anyone who disagrees with them could be doing so from a position of honesty, that things are so "obvious" that anyone who can't see what we see somehow "must be" acting from a position of duplicity. Yet we also know that people drastically overweight their own experiences when deriving conclusions drawn from scanty data.
Most of the articles posted by partisans on here are from biased sources, but the poster thinks otherwise...google most political issues and see how the articles use 'facts, statistics and graphs' to support that the other party does it more than the writer's party.
Yeah, that's a very astute observation of a very sad state of affairs these days: "While I may be a murderer, at least I'm not a serial killer, like they are" pretty much sums up a great deal of "dialog" these days.![]()
Tennessee's unique way of raising revenue...
http://www.tsn.ca/nhl/story/?id=435638
Wonder if the tax applies to all professional sports?
Tennessee's unique way of raising revenue...
http://www.tsn.ca/nhl/story/?id=435638
Wonder if the tax applies to all professional sports?
I've been reading Daniel Kahneman's book, Thinking Fast and Slow. Amazing stuff. It's quite revelatory to learn about how our minds work.
One of his most important findings is that we all tend to drastically overweight experience based on small sample sizes (in other words, our intuitive understanding of statistics is worse than terrible, it is actually misleading). A small sample size means it is too tiny to draw any meaningful generalizations, yet we all tend to generalize based on a few, or even just one, experience anyway. (how many times have we heard a person say "Company X? their customer support sucks!" and find out it is based on one bad experience).
What I found quite striking was that, for kidney cancer, the counties with the lowest per capital incidence are small rural counties. And, for kidney cancer, the counties with the highest per capita incidence are small rural counties.
Our minds insist on supplying a "reason" or an "explanation" for this data based on intuition, association, and inference. Yet what this data "really" indicates is that kidney cancer is relatively rare, and so if you have a small population, the difference of just one or two incidents will skew the results substantially.
In other words, if you flip a coin three times, the chances are one in four that the result will be all heads or all tails. If you flip a coin seven time, the chances are one in sixty-four that the result will be all heads or all tails. Yet our mind says, "wow, one in four! something significant must be going on here!" for the first data point, yet our mind also says "meh, one in sixty-four, no big deal" for the second data point....yet it is exactly the same baseline data set in both cases!
I suspect that much of the polarization we see today comes from people who cannot imagine that anyone who disagrees with them could be doing so from a position of honesty, that things are so "obvious" that anyone who can't see what we see somehow "must be" acting from a position of duplicity. Yet we also know that people drastically overweight their own experiences when deriving conclusions drawn from scanty data.
May be surprising to you, but I have no trouble with a State deciding to raise its minimum wage. Washington sometimes makes mistakes in one size fits all.
Not necessarily surprising as you're not so much of a libertarian. Minimum wage increases tend to have broad support so they must be attracting people beyond the usual lefty coalition.
They have short-term support, at least until unemployment kicks in.
Because places like Mississippi are really rocking it in the employment department with their low minimum wage...
Isn't it funny how there's so many examples out there of his utopia and they're all backwoods backwater hellholes that no one in their right mind would want to live?
I always wondering why libertarians don't just all move to Somalia, where there's no government and presumably if you arm yourself enough, no taxes either.![]()
I always wondering [sic] why libertarians don't just all move to Somalia
Probably for the same reason that progressives don't just all move to Cuba or Nicaragua....