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$10.10 Minimum Wage Could Lift About 5 Million Out Of Poverty

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hidys

Member
It's more complicated than this. Here is the chain of economics that makes this a complicated discussion:

1) We raise minimum wage
2) Because we raise minimum wage, more money enters the economy as more people spend. Inflation occurs over time.
3) As this inflation occurs, the value of the minimum wage increase decreases until (possibly) it is completely nullified. Poor people end up with the same total purchasing power, just making 15 dollars an hour to buy a 15 dollar T-shirt instead of making 8 dollars an hour to buy the same T-shirt for an uninflated 8 dollars.

Now, that possibly in italics in step 3 is the real discussion here. Virtually all economists agree that an increase in minimum wage causes an increase in inflation; the question is how large it is, and what portion of the increase in wages is nullified by it.

Given that America currently has an inflation rate below its target of 2-3 percent (I believe it's about 1.5 it's actually 1.2 which is really far too low) there is hardly any real risk of that. I would say the US economy could do with a little inflation at this point.
 
Right - but it's pretty well accepted that minimum wage's over a certain amount of the median income (somewhere around 50%) for a given demographic is harmful. So doesn't a national one basically mean that it's either increasingly useless away from the poorest demographic in the counter, or otherwise harmful to those under it (if it's not placed at the lowest area's 50% median)?

I'm not quite sure I follow. Isn't the issue is that it's already too low pretty much everywhere, therefore worrying about "going too high" is pretty much pointless right now? Maybe that would be a problem if we tried to make it $30/hr suddenly, but going to $10-$15 doesn't look like the massive risk some people paint it as (I feel like this same point can be applied to tax rate discussions in this country)

On a separate note, this map is pretty interesting. Looks like there are exceptions for states to get out of paying the federal minimum wage anway: http://www.dol.gov/whd/minwage/america.htm
 

jsip

Banned
Hey, since we're talking about annecdotes let me give you mine.

I have a friend who worked for Perot Systems doing work within their IT org. Very successful at what he did. Made six figures was financially stable and had four kids. Why not? He could support them. Then the bottom fell out of the market, and outsourcing happened dude got laid off. Further his wife had some real serious health issues. Took years and years for the guy to find a job and when he did it wasn't nearly as much as he used to make because he couldn't move because his wife's condition. But hey, fuck him right? That irresponsible fuck.
The product of a bad economy handed to everyone on a silver platter by our policies will have adverse effects, sure. The inability to prepare for a "rainy day" and live within your means is NOT a product of policy or economy, however. Blame is shifted, but not outright passed.
 

ronito

Member
The product of a bad economy handed to everyone on a silver platter by our policies will have adverse effects, sure. The inability to prepare for a "rainy day" and live within your means is NOT a product of policy or economy, however. Blame is shifted, but not outright passed.

Have you seen medical costs? "Rainy day"? More like impending financial ruin.
 

Seeds

Member
I'll do you one better. My mother worked 3 jobs to support her three children (not just "a kid"). Why? Because she didnt have the skills necessary to find a single job that did the same. What did she do? She kept working and got the skills necessary and found that single job.

I love my mom but having to work 3 jobs was not society's failure and never will be. In the absence of "good jobs" when you are forced to work jobs outside of your skill set just to pay bills it is also not society's fault and not your own (partly), rather, the policies of our leaders which led to that situstion of forced hands. Even then, the ability to prepare and adapt to change is not something that is ever taught (sadly) and by consequence part of the blame still falls on the individual.

There is only so far an individual can pass the buck. This isnt some "bootstraps" mentality, it's common sense. Being proactive isnt something today's reactive society is good at.

You are free to pretend that the individual is never at fault, if you wish: Woe is me, woe is me.

And what if the economy didn't have those three jobs for your mother, what if she only found one?
 
D

Deleted member 231381

Unconfirmed Member
It's more complicated than this. Here is the chain of economics that makes this a complicated discussion:

1) We raise minimum wage
2) Because we raise minimum wage, more money enters the economy as more people spend. Inflation occurs over time.
3) As this inflation occurs, the value of the minimum wage increase decreases until (possibly) it is completely nullified. Poor people end up with the same total purchasing power, just making 15 dollars an hour to buy a 15 dollar T-shirt instead of making 8 dollars an hour to buy the same T-shirt for an uninflated 8 dollars.

Now, that possibly in italics in step 3 is the real discussion here. Virtually all economists agree that an increase in minimum wage causes an increase in inflation; the question is how large it is, and what portion of the increase in wages is nullified by it.

Sorry, Opiate, but you don't quite have 2) right. It's not true to say that more money has entered the economy. An increase in the minimum wage is simply a change in the distribution of revenues - instead of going towards profit, running costs, or the wages of highly-paid workers, some of that money goes towards low-paid workers instead. There's no 'new money' given the authority responsible for currency issue hasn't done anything.

The reason increases in the minimum wage causes inflation is because people with low incomes tend to spend more as a proportion of their income over a given time period than people with high incomes. As such, when you divert money from highly-paid workers, or from shareholders who statistically are quite wealthy, towards low-paid workers, then money is spent more quickly (or in econ-speak, the transaction velocity of money has increased). This is what drives inflation.
 
The people making the insane arguments that it would be a negative or disatrous thing to raise the minimum wage 3 DOLLARS in this thread, are the very same reason we will not see this pass any time soon.

Like others have said before me, so many people brainwashed into thinking that this would somehow ruin the economy, mass layoffs, huge cost of living/price hikes, etc.

It's crazy. The money is there for everyone to be making much more than we are, and for all businesses to thrive, even with the expanded population. We've just been told for so long that it isn't that most people really believe its true.
 

KingGondo

Banned
I'll do you one better. My mother worked 3 jobs to support her three children (not just "a kid"). Why? Because she didnt have the skills necessary to find a single job that did the same. What did she do? She kept working and got the skills necessary and found that single job.
Good for her. But there's no reason she should have had to work 3 jobs that paid shit with presumably terrible hours just to support her children. Especially since that ends up hurting the kids through no fault of their own because their parent is always absent.

As long as you're working 40 hours a week, you should receive supplemental government assistance that gets you above the poverty line, or the employer should be forced to pay you a wage that does the same. Period.

I love my mom but having to work 3 jobs was not society's failure and never will be. In the absence of "good jobs" when you are forced to work jobs outside of your skill set just to pay bills it is also not society's fault and not your own (partly), rather, the policies of our leaders which led to that situstion of forced hands. Even then, the ability to prepare and adapt to change is not something that is ever taught (sadly) and by consequence part of the blame still falls on the individual.
We've been conditioned to accept the fallacy that certain jobs are just not worth doing (even though somebody has to do them) and that those who perform them don't deserve a decent wage.

If someone is getting out there and working ~40 hours per week, they deserve to make a wage that pays reasonable bills and living expenses.

There is only so far an individual can pass the buck. This isnt some "bootstraps" mentality, it's common sense. Being proactive isnt something today's reactive society is good at.
Please elaborate on what you mean by "today's reactive society." P.S. Any generalization about "today's society" tends to make my eyes roll. How, exactly, were things different in olden times?

You are free to pretend that the individual is never at fault, if you wish: Woe is me, woe is me.
Straw man.
 

MC Safety

Member
I'm uncomfortable with shifting the notion of minimum wage from a beginning salary to one that's needed to support the underclass that's permanently mired in it.

We shouldn't accept little-to-no job mobility as the status quo. I am all for an adequate minimum wage, but only if it functions as a leaping-off point and not a final resting place.
 
I would argue that, at least in America, productivity and wages have long been decoupled, and almost never in favor of employees.

But overall productivity never really has been "the thing" - productivity doubling in ten years, for example, makes no difference if all the employees are also doubling their productivity. In such a situation, the employer is given no economic reason to increase pay. It's a given person's productivity compared to the other employees that's what matters within fairly large boundaries (ie being 10000% more productive is unlikely to mean McDonalds pay you 10000% more) just like the value of consumer electronics are seen through the lens of the competition available (again, within those same boundaries.

Well that's kind of the thing, isn't it? I'm absolutely positive that there is labor currently making minimum wage that, if there was no mandated minimum wage, employers would be only offering even less then $7 an hour. The question is: how socially responsible is that?

It can be said to be "worth" $10.10 because we are saying that we have decided that all labor is worth at least $10.10

But is that really how we define value? Employees aren't a fiat currency - they get hired and paid to perform a certain job, usually so that it benefits the employer in terms of a product produce or service offered for money. It may well be socially irresponsible to allow people to earn only $4 an hour if that's all the market deems their produce to be worth, but I don't think we should use words like "value" or "worth" to describe it - at that point, they're effectively being paid based on their need, not their ability.

I'm not quite sure I follow. Isn't the issue is that it's already too low pretty much everywhere, therefore worrying about "going too high" is pretty much pointless right now? Maybe that would be a problem if we tried to make it $30/hr suddenly, but going to $10-$15 doesn't look like the massive risk some people paint it as (I feel like this same point can be applied to tax rate discussions in this country)

On a separate note, this map is pretty interesting. Looks like there are exceptions for states to get out of paying the federal minimum wage anway: http://www.dol.gov/whd/minwage/america.htm

Well, I don't know - is it? Remember that taking the state-wide or even city-wide median income isn't really enough; You need to also look at various other demographics, chiefly age. If an area has a pretty high income (potentially allowing for a higher minimum wage) but the unskilled in that area are paid very little - perhaps it's a college town with a disproportionately large number of under-25's who have yet to graduate college - then these people may find themselves priced out of a market if the minimum wage is set too high. This is an example, but my point is that there's a lot of finesse to it - in the UK, different age ranges have different minimums for this reason, though the graduations are not that significant unfortunately, which is partly what lead to the situation between 1997-2007 of high employment increases in all demographics but the young, who saw employment stagnate despite a booming economy (1997 was the year the minimum wage was brought in in the UK - prior to this, we didn't have one).

Out of interest, on that map do you know what happens in states with local minimum wages lower than federal ones? Does the federal one only apply to states which don't have their own specific minimum wage laws?
 

jsip

Banned
Have you seen medical costs? "Rainy day"? More like impending financial ruin.
I'm not quite sure what you missed about a product of policy? Or shifting but not passing blame? So you are suggesting that a minimum wage bump of a few bucks would offset "financial ruin"? Fascinating!
 

subrock

Member
Has there been a study on other increases in expenses when the wage is increased? For example rent.

When Ft Murray boomed from the oil sands and wages sky rocketed so did rent. It basically went from 300-400 dollars for an apartment to 1000 dollars to sleep on someones couch.

If I was a landlord and min wage went up I would increase my rent accordingly.
Fort MacMurray, where the avarage wage is up somewhere around $160k/year and was a desolate rural shithole, and is experiencing localized hyperinflation is not a great comparison for this thread.

If you want to look at comparable examples perhaps look at the fact that every Canadian province has a minimum wage above $9.95.

http://canadaonline.about.com/od/labourstandards/a/minimum-wage-in-canada.htm
 

davepoobond

you can't put a price on sparks
i think we should reduce minimum wage. since it promotes the cost of everything to go up, if we reduce to nothing that should mean everything becomes free right?
 

Freshmaker

I am Korean.
I'm uncomfortable with shifting the notion of minimum wage from a beginning salary to one that's needed to support the underclass that's permanently mired in it.

We shouldn't accept little-to-no job mobility as the status quo. I am all for an adequate minimum wage, but only if it functions as a leaping-off point and not a final resting place.

$10.10 an hour isn't a get fat and comfy wage.
 

Opiate

Member
Sorry, Opiate, but you don't quite have 2) right. It's not true to say that more money has entered the economy. An increase in the minimum wage is simply a change in the distribution of revenues - instead of going towards profit, running costs, or highly-paid workers, some of that money goes towards low-paid workers instead. There's no 'new money' given the authority responsible for currency issue hasn't done anything.

I thought about changing that, but didn't think specifics were needed. It's an increase in the velocity of money, which affects inflation.

The reason increases in the minimum wage causes inflation is because people with low incomes tend to spend more as a proportion of their income over a given time period than people with high incomes. As such, when you divert money from highly-paid workers, or from shareholders who statistically are quite wealthy, towards low-paid workers, then money is spent more quickly (or in econ-speak, the transaction velocity of money has increased). This is what drives inflation.

Yes, I definitely agree. I clearly should have read your second paragraph before responding to your first. I just had to make a decision between being concise and being particular, and I chose the former.
 

ronito

Member
I'm not quite sure what you missed about a product of policy? Or shifting but not passing blame? So you are suggesting that a minimum wage bump of a few bucks would offset "financial ruin"? Fascinating!

When did I say anything about the minimum wage? If you're gonna be an ass. Be an ass that at least pays attention.
 
The people making the insane arguments that it would be a negative or disatrous thing to raise the minimum wage 3 DOLLARS in this thread, are the very same reason we will not see this pass any time soon.

Like others have said before me, so many people brainwashed into thinking that this would somehow ruin the economy, mass layoffs, huge cost of living/price hikes, etc.

It's crazy. The money is there for everyone to be making much more than we are, and for all businesses to thrive, even with the expanded population. We've just been told for so long that it isn't that most people really believe its true.

It's kind of a religious belief at this point.

Though I think there's a deeper issue behind a lot of that...which is the idea that our trust in public institutions is so low nowadays (which is often warranted), that the only people we feel we should "trust" is ourselves. Which leads to all the stories and myths of self-sufficiency, bootstraps, blah blah.

Granted, America has always kinda been that way since the beginning, but I think it's grown a lot more in recent years
especially since the 80's
 

Opiate

Member
But overall productivity never really has been "the thing" - productivity doubling in ten years, for example, makes no difference if all the employees are also doubling their productivity. In such a situation, the employer is given no economic reason to increase pay. It's a given person's productivity compared to the other employees that's what matters within fairly large boundaries (ie being 10000% more productive is unlikely to mean McDonalds pay you 10000% more) just like the value of consumer electronics are seen through the lens of the competition available (again, within those same boundaries.

Okay, I'm not understanding your position. How are you suggesting that we define the "worth" of an employee's productivity then?
 

Kinitari

Black Canada Mafia
http://www.bls.gov/cps/minwage2012.htm#2


By and large, that woman doesn't exists. But...but...here is this example. The country has more than 300 million people. We have to deal with abstracts when setting policy.

People under 25 make up about half of the minimum wage earners. Only 1.6 million American's earn the minimum wage which is .005% of the population. The fact that she's unmarried means she is 4x more likely to earn the minimum wage than if she was married.

Want to know something else? Most minimum wage earners tend to be white and middle class. They are either kids or people who are earning supplementary income.

Sincere question about minimum wage - is that 1.6 million figure people who earn exactly minimum wage? What about people who earn between minimum wage and the proposed 10 an hour? You usually get a couple cent pay hike after working minimum for a few months... I wonder if that is then taken into consideration with minimum wage statistics, I'm sure they are
 

Touchdown

Banned
i think we should reduce minimum wage. since it promotes the cost of everything to go up, if we reduce to nothing that should mean everything becomes free right?

Ikr.
ibisfTBDHAPaOs.gif
 

The Technomancer

card-carrying scientician
But is that really how we define value? Employees aren't a fiat currency - they get hired and paid to perform a certain job, usually so that it benefits the employer in terms of a product produce or service offered for money. It may well be socially irresponsible to allow people to earn only $4 an hour if that's all the market deems their produce to be worth, but I don't think we should use words like "value" or "worth" to describe it - at that point, they're effectively being paid based on their need, not their ability.

Well no, what we're saying is that there is a minimum valuation on labor. That a person's work, we have decided, is worth a certain amount by virtue of simply being labor. It doesn't fit into a purely market driven scheme because yeah, it isn't purely market driven. That ain't a bad thing. In some sense yes, I suppose an analogy between labor and a fiat currency could be drawn.
 

Jado

Banned
Yeah, this is basically code for the "I don't want to / don't have what it takes to, bust my ass to get ahead in life" ideology.

The majority of people are unremarkable and stay in the class they're born. Those who are born into the middle and upper classes stay there without any amazing intelligence, high grades, notable achievements or strenuous effort. Most of us are B and C students (or worse). You're asking the working poor -- the ones who grew up going to the worse schools, living with the most distractions (inadequate housing, neighborhood crime, hunger), the least amount of free time and with the least resources -- to give a relatively extraordinary A+ effort to pull themselves out of living hell... or otherwise they're not really trying or they don't really want it!

Like you and Frank the Great, I too came from a poor immigrant family. Now I live a good middle-class life with a job that pays well. I consider myself fortunate and not typical. Hundreds, if not thousands, of my schoolmates are likely still stuck in the very same poor/working-class neighborhood I grew up or in similar areas under the same circumstances. I'm not foolish enough to think my own success (and yes, luck) can be replicated by every single person who was in my shoes. There are multiple people out there just like you, just as smart and eager, who are stuck in poverty because of some unforeseen bad twist in their lives or because they're stuck living in a place with nothing to offer. Again, class mobility often requires a tremendous effort that not many are capable of doing. Kinda shitty to think otherwise.

And between food stamps (which provide more food a month than I can afford) and unemployment and every other social service, you can get by pretty well without doing much of shit. I know several people that live this lifestyle. I work hard all day so they don't have to. You'd never guess that they're "poor". And you can't tell me it's not true because I KNOW these people.

So everyone that needs assistance is a cheat and a liar? Care to explain why so many working individuals need food stamps AND food banks to survive? It's not just lazy bums sitting at home all day.
 
Okay, I'm not understanding your position. How are you suggesting that we define the "worth" of an employee's productivity then?

Via the markets. How much is someone willing to pay you for your skill or ability or dumb labour? To me, that's the only definition of "value" that means anything. It's what makes Banksy and Damien Hirst's art "worth" more than an art-school graduate, even if the effort, thought and intricacy of both is the same.

For the purposes of a minimum wage, this isn't really relevant - by definition, it's subverting this market based approach in favour of a redistribution of wealth, and that's fine. By and large I'm in favour of it from a purely macro sense. I just find it a little odd when people talk about how awful employers are for giving low wages or even wanting to pay lower wages were there not a minimum wage, as if they should be expected to perform what is in effect an act of charity with their company's profits. The whole point is that this labour isn't worth as much as the minimum wage, otherwise it'd already be receiving it.

In other words, I think a robust defence of the minimum wage should come from the position of economic benefits and possibly less social tension via the possible reduction in income inequality, rather than a sort of weird emotive argument about how labour is intrinsically worth more because they're humans etc.

Edit: to clarify and as a response to The Technomancer above, when you "assign" value to labour, it ceases to really mean "value", surely? You can do it with a fiat currency because, assuming there's reason to have faith in a currency, when it's determined that $1 is now worth $2 instead, you can then use that to buy $2 - or what used to be $2 - of product with it. That's not the case with labour. You can assign it the value of $10.10 if you want, but that doesn't mean an employer actually gets $10.10 worth of productivity.
 

ronito

Member
*reads OP again*

Hey! Welcome to a thread about minimum wage!

Hey there! Welcome to a conversation.
Here's how it works.
Someone makes a point, you're free to discuss said point.
This is how it works.
Unless of course, you're some sort of indignant person that really has no point to make other than that they're indignant
 
D

Deleted member 231381

Unconfirmed Member
Via the markets. How much is someone willing to pay you for your skill or ability or dumb labour? To me, that's the only definition of "value" that means anything. It's what makes Banksy and Damien Hirst's art "worth" more than an art-school graduate, even if the effort, thought and intricacy of both is the same.

This is somewhat dishonest, though, because the problem most Western societies face is that employers are willing to pay higher wages than the wages they actually do pay. There are far less employers than there are employees, granting them a monopsony hold on the market, and employers are normally wealthier than employee, meaning that employees often have to accept offers regardless of whether that offer accurately reflects their productive capacity. If a worker would make an extra £15 an hour for my business, then, under the right circumstances, I'd be willing to pay that worker up to £14.99 because at the end of the day I still make money, so my 'willingness' price is £14.99. However, because there are so many workers and because those workers need labour, need it to feed their kids and pay their mortgage and meet the costs of school, need it much more than I do, and because there's so many workers, I can pay them £5.00, because they have nowhere else to go, despite the fact I'd be willing to go £10 higher.

For the purposes of a minimum wage, this isn't really relevant - by definition, it's subverting this market based approach in favour of a redistribution of wealth, and that's fine. By and large I'm in favour of it from a purely macro sense. I just find it a little odd when people talk about how awful employers are for giving low wages or even wanting to pay lower wages were there not a minimum wage, as if they should be expected to perform what is in effect an act of charity with their company's profits. The whole point is that this labour isn't worth as much as the minimum wage, otherwise it'd already be receiving it.

...and this is why the above is important. This labour may well have been worth as much the minimum wage and possibly even more, but labourers aren't in the position to be able to make a fair bargain. Yes, in an entirely competitive market with full knowledge and an infinite number of employers and employees, the wage rate a worker receives is equivalent to their marginal productivity. Economics 101, etc. However, it should be immediately apparent that we're not in this entirely competitive market. We're in a market where workers do not have full information and have essentially no bargaining strength, particularly with the constant erosion of unions without corresponding legislation to empower individual workers. That means someone whose productive value exceeds the minimum wage often still gets paid far less than it, because of just how easy it is for large companies to exploit workers.

In other words, I think a robust defence of the minimum wage should come from the position of economic benefits and possibly less social tension via the possible reduction in income inequality, rather than a sort of weird emotive argument about how labour is intrinsically worth more because they're humans etc.

See above, then.
 
Minimum wage sucks, but, the only way to survive is to step over everyone and get into a management spot. 7.25 at walmart is not possible to survive on, not when they refuse to give associates anything over 32 hours. Even then becoming a manager is hardly better, you'll still be making next to nothing, but, now you'll be working long hours and be under huge pressure.
 
in Canada the minimum wage is 10.50
trust me it still feels like you are working for peanuts.
it really needs to be something like 13.50, you should be able to make 100 bucks in a day of work IMO.
 

whitehawk

Banned
This will not help in the long run, this will only raise the cost of living for everyone else. I have a very strong belief that if someone working minimum wage works hard enough they will get ahead. No matter how pessimistic people seem to be now and days about this country it is still very much the land of opportunity so if you work hard enough you will get yourself out of any hole.
There will always be the need for people to work at McDonalds. You're thinking with you're heart, not your brain. there are a ton of adults working minimum wage jobs, and it needs to be addressed.
 
Is there any data at all that shows an increase in the minimum wage would result in an increase in inflation or expenses enough to negate the additional purchasing power of the higher wage?

Because I sure haven't seen it. And historical data and data from other nations with a higher minimum wage than the US suggests that that doesn't happen.

I feel like those who assume it would haven't taken even a few seconds to consider the fraction of the population whose wages would be immediately effected or the amount of revenue the businesses they work for earn per employee, let alone bothered to do a quick Google for some hard numbers. What was it, 46 cents per Wal-mart transaction needed to cover a wage hike, ignoring the fact that Wal-mart has enough profit to easily cover the increase in costs with no additional revenue? And UE is high enough that the increase in demand from the increase in wages would likely result in new hires to meet that demand as opposed to inflation?
 

Dali

Member
http://www.bls.gov/cps/minwage2012.htm#2


By and large, that woman doesn't exists. But...but...here is this example. The country has more than 300 million people. We have to deal with abstracts when setting policy.

People under 25 make up about half of the minimum wage earners. Only 1.6 million American's earn the minimum wage which is .005% of the population. The fact that she's unmarried means she is 4x more likely to earn the minimum wage than if she was married.

Want to know something else? Most minimum wage earners tend to be white and middle class. They are either kids or people who are earning supplementary income.
Once you get your 25 cent raise because you've been at McDonald's for 6 months you're no longer making min wage. You assume the people getting min wage now are the only ones that would benefit from the raise but you're not taking into account the people that have been cleaning ladies or burger flippers or shelf stockers for years and are now making a whole shiny dollar more than the minimum.
 
Minimum wage should be, adjusting for inflation, be around $21-23 and yet we have people bitching about $10+

KuGsj.gif


GTFO
You should learn some austerity from Europe.

We don't want our workers to have enough money to be consumers, do we? Do we?

The economy can't support having consumers. That would be communism!
 

Opiate

Member
Via the markets. How much is someone willing to pay you for your skill or ability or dumb labour? To me, that's the only definition of "value" that means anything. It's what makes Banksy and Damien Hirst's art "worth" more than an art-school graduate, even if the effort, thought and intricacy of both is the same.

For the purposes of a minimum wage, this isn't really relevant - by definition, it's subverting this market based approach in favour of a redistribution of wealth,

All of this assumes that markets are the "natural" or "correct" way to approach valuation, and that other forms of valuation -- even more objective ones, like a relation to productivity -- are somehow a subversion of this. What if I don't agree with this unstated premise?

In other words, I think a robust defence of the minimum wage should come from the position of economic benefits and possibly less social tension via the possible reduction in income inequality, rather than a sort of weird emotive argument about how labour is intrinsically worth more because they're humans etc.

Again, your basis seems to be that markets are correct, and that other means of evaluating "worth" are subverting the natural balance. It's the implicit basis of your argument here and it is something I don't agree with. We can evaluate "worth" in many ways, and market forces are just one of those ways. Yes, if you start from the perspective that free markets correctly evaluate "worth," then of course any other measure of "worth" is a subversion. But you can do this in reverse: if you start with the premise that productivity measures worth, then markets are the subverting force when they pay high productivity workers low wages.

In other words, you have a huge initial unstated premise: that markets are the "natural" or "correct" way to evaluate worth. I would say are a way to evaluate worth, and I don't see why we should view market valuation as the "correct" way to evaluate worth and view every other way as a subverting interloper.
 

Dali

Member
Has there been a study on other increases in expenses when the wage is increased? For example rent.

When Ft Murray boomed from the oil sands and wages sky rocketed so did rent. It basically went from 300-400 dollars for an apartment to 1000 dollars to sleep on someones couch.

If I was a landlord and min wage went up I would increase my rent accordingly.
that's because people were moving there from all over because of the boom. There wasn't enough supply to meet the demand. That's the main reason the prices skyrocketed.
 
The difference between poverty and almost poverty is rather academic. The real problem is everyone who is working should be making a livable wage where they live and this might help but ultimately would not fix the problem.
 

PopeReal

Member
There are people actually arguing against a minimum wage increase? Holy crap.

Minimum wage is next to nothing in this country. You just live paycheck to paycheck. $10 is still too low.
 

Wthermans

Banned
The product of a bad economy handed to everyone on a silver platter by our policies will have adverse effects, sure. The inability to prepare for a "rainy day" and live within your means is NOT a product of policy or economy, however. Blame is shifted, but not outright passed.
Rainy days signify short term downturns or problems. Having your wages slashed in half because of a weak job market and economy is in no way short term or corrected with a normal individuals 6 months of suggested rainy day funds.

Personally I feel all citizens should receive a living wage with annual cost of living adjustments based on CPI and inflation.
 

Chumly

Member
It's amazing how right wing propaganda had brain washed people..... Some of the arguments in this thread are down right scary.
 

Zhengi

Member
Got to say, getting federal minimum wage while living in California is ridiculously tough to live on.

You should be getting $8.00 an hour in California, which is above the federal minimum wage, unless you are exempt from this law. Also, the minimum wage increased January 1, 2014 to $9.00 an hour and will again increase to $10.00 an hour in 2016.

Also, after going through that study, it was definitely an interesting read. The only problem I really have with it is that the authors put all their numbers in terms of percentages, but never really gave raw numbers that they used in order to get those percentages. They explained the equations they used, but did not give us the numbers they used to crunch through the equations. They also never explained how they got the 10 cents a day figure.
 

Moppet13

Member
You should be getting $8.00 an hour in California, which is above the federal minimum wage, unless you are exempt from this law. Also, the minimum wage increased January 1, 2014 to $9.00 an hour and will again increase to $10.00 an hour in 2016.

Also, after going through that study, it was definitely an interesting read. The only problem I really have with it is that the authors put all their numbers in terms of percentages, but never really gave raw numbers that they used in order to get those percentages. They explained the equations they used, but did not give us the numbers they used to crunch through the equations. They also never explained how they got the 10 cents a day figure.
I work on an Indian reservation so they only have to abide by federal law when it comes to wage. So I get fucked a bit.
 

diffusionx

Gold Member
And between food stamps (which provide more food a month than I can afford) and unemployment and every other social service, you can get by pretty well without doing much of shit. I know several people that live this lifestyle. I work hard all day so they don't have to. You'd never guess that they're "poor". And you can't tell me it's not true because I KNOW these people.

I work hard all day and yea I guess some of my money goes to the people you describe. But I'm pretty sure I am afforded a better lifestyle than them too, so I work hard so I can have the life I want. If I wanted their life I could just stop working and go on the dole, I guess.
 
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Deleted member 231381

Unconfirmed Member
Sweden? The social democratic country with no minimum wage?

That's somewhat intellectually dishonest. The reason Sweden has no mandated minimum wage is because each sector normally sets a unique minimum wage for that sector, reached as a result of collective bargaining between unions and businesses. Thus, there's no need for legislation. Given the current desiccated state of unions in the United States of America and the unwillingness of most businesses to open up negotiations, that's not exactly an option.
 
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