Skwim
Veteran Member
I just re-figured and came out with $43.63 Arrrgh! I just hate this new abacus.How about "closer' to $43.25???
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I just re-figured and came out with $43.63 Arrrgh! I just hate this new abacus.How about "closer' to $43.25???
So what should the minimum wage be? The industries who only pay minimum are generally those that employ teenagers and immigrants as a majority of thier workforce. Fast-food joints,for example. If these employers had to pay,say $12 per hour to every worker, we could be faced with much higher prices for the,um, food they sell. Is anybody really willing to pay $10 for a Taco Bell burrito, or a similarly priced Big Mac? Think of the cost of some of these items when purchased at higher-end eateries even now....combined with included tips. I totally agree that current minimums should be raised, but without some sort of restraint on the prices that may be charged as a result, it may be like a one-legged man at a butt-kicking contest.
I'm not sure of the point of these doom-and-gloom predictions when there are plenty of available comparators.This is the 500# gorilla in the room. A "livable wage for all" sounds so relentlessly positive, how can anyone but those fringe libertarians (me) argue against it?
But put a number to it....say $20/hr, & practical problems loom even for leftish folk.
What would happen to Obama's interns who already make less than the fed min wage?
There would also be greater outsourcing to private contractors, & greater impetus for automating newly expensive unskilled labor.
Doom & gloom? My point is that we should consider the possible consequences (whichI'm not sure of the point of these doom-and-gloom predictions when there are plenty of available comparators.
I don't think that's a livable wage, if it means being able to support oneself comfortably with a single full time job.For instance, take Ontario:
- the general minimum wage is $10.25 ($9.76 US at the current exchange rate) (source: Minimum Wage | Ministry of Labour)
- unemployment is at 7.5% (source: Unemployment rate remains at 7.1% for June - Business - CBC News)
I don't think that's a livable wage, if it means being able to support oneself comfortably with a single full time job.
All I know is the joke is on anyone who accepts a job making that kind of money and actually believes they can live on wages like that.All I know is 7.25? Is a joke.
All I know is the joke is on anyone who accepts a job making that kind of money and actually believes they can live on wages like that.
7.25 an hour buys a cell phone or a movie ticket or perhaps a happy meal and some gasoline. Rent, food, utilities.......no way.
Actual evidence will be a murky thing, given the complexity of economics. Rather than asking "if" prices will increase if wages increase, the question should be whether the total net effect is better or worse. And that would depend upon the amount of the increase. It's possible that a small increase would be great, but a large increase would be bad.I didn't say that it's a livable wage. What I wanted to do was explore the claim that increasing the minimum wage encourages jobs to leave or increases prices. Information on minimum wage, unemployment levels, and prices for consumer goods is readily available, so it seems to me that we can see whether or not the evidence supports the truth or falsehood of the claim.
Is this an admission that your concerns aren't rooted in evidence?Actual evidence will be a murky thing, given the complexity of economics.
In the big picture, that's what we're talking about. Potential negative consequences have been suggested (e.g. an increase in the price of a Taco Bell burrito or outsourcing of jobs to overseas), and I think that we can probably agree that, all else being equal, low wage earners having more money is a good thing, too.Rather than asking "if" prices will increase if wages increase, the question should be whether the total net effect is better or worse.
Lots of things are "possible". It's "possible" that if the minimum wage is ever precisely $17.52, this will act as a secret password that will unlock a volcano monster in the Earth's core that will devour humanity. Do we need to worry about this possibility? That depends on what evidence and reason suggest about its likelihood of being true.And that would depend upon the amount of the increase. It's possible that a small increase would be great, but a large increase would be bad.
My concerns are rooted in experience & speculation.Is this an admission that your concerns aren't rooted in evidence?
There will be other effects too, which will depend greatly upon the level of increase. How many jobs will be lost because overseas costs will become relatively much less? How many jobs will be lost because the task becomes not worth doing? How many will be replaced by automation. These things are already happening, so a good question is what increase will there be.In the big picture, that's what we're talking about. Potential negative consequences have been suggested (e.g. an increase in the price of a Taco Bell burrito or outsourcing of jobs to overseas), and I think that we can probably agree that, all else being equal, low wage earners having more money is a good thing, too.
Any thoughts on how to determine what increase is optimum?If we find that bad things increase as the minimum wage increases, then yes, we would need to weigh the bad of those bad things against the good of the wage increase to decide whether the net effect is positive or negative. However, if we find that increasing the minimum wage doesn't affect those bad things at all - or if they actually get better - then we don't need to weigh the different factors against each other to conclude that the result is a net positive.
Interesting hypotheses you have there.Lots of things are "possible". It's "possible" that if the minimum wage is ever precisely $17.52, this will act as a secret password that will unlock a volcano monster in the Earth's core that will devour humanity. Do we need to worry about this possibility? That depends on what evidence and reason suggest about its likelihood of being true.
I would settle for good reasons to believe your concerns might actually happen. What are they?My concerns are rooted in experience & speculation.
Evidence in economics? That's a tough thing to find, since we can't do real
life experiments in the way we can with something as simple as physics.
Other good questions:There will be other effects too, which will depend greatly upon the level of increase. How many jobs will be lost because overseas costs will become relatively much less? How many jobs will be lost because the task becomes not worth doing? How many will be replaced by automation. These things are already happening, so a good question is what increase will there be.
Even before we ask that, we would need to have an idea of what the effect of raising the minimum wage would be. As you said earlier, it's possible that the effect of a small increase would be "great".Any thoughts on how to determine what increase is optimum?