We should try to get rid of high paying jobs. Send them to China and India.
On the other hand, if people are paid more, they have more money to spend on goods and services creating demand for other jobs.
Are minimum wage jobs significant enough that changing the minimum wage would have much impact on overall jobs or the economy? According to the BLS- 59% of all workers in 2012 were paid hourly (the rest are salaried in some form).
http://www.bls.gov/cps/minwage2012.htm Of that, 4.7% (3.6 million) were paid the Federal Minimum Wage or less. That converts to 2.7% of all workers covered by minimum wage rules.
The proposed effect of raising minimum wage has never been to bolster the economy, so that's irrelevant to the discussion. Yes, the economy will adjust to rising wages, but the question is if this hurts or helps the people it is said to help (i.e., the underskilled making minimum wage).
First, more data from the BLS: less than 3% of all workers only make minimum wage, and 1/2 are 24 or younger. 77% of those who make $7.25/hr belong to households above the poverty line. Does that really sound like it's worth all of the negative effects to give more money to people who in large part need job experience/skills more than they need immediate cash flow?
There are 3 things that will happen when minimum wage is raised beyond what those employees are worth (in many cases all 3):
1. Less skilled workers price themselves out of employment, as most employers must rely on fewer or better employees to do more. By offering higher wages, the more skilled/experienced who previously would not work for that low wage will now be willing to do so at a higher wage. And of course most businesses cannot afford to be charities. Training, turnover, inefficiency, or more simply an employee being paid more than they can profit the company simply won't happen. They have far too much invested, risk, and in many cases small profit margins to opt for less skilled employees. You only help the more skilled, while ensuring the under-skilled will not be given a costly chance.
2. Prices go up, so the minimum wage workers may not be much better off, while those priced out of employment are worse off.
3. Big business gains a competitive edge, as they have more resources, volume and technology to overpay some employees to push buttons, whereas many of your small businesses simply can't turn a profit when they're having to pay labor more than that labor makes for them.
Also, I have to ask, if these business owners are said to be so greedy and exploiting workers, then why are only 3% of jobs minimum wage? There is a simple economic answer to that. Again, businesses compete for labor too.
The best thing you can do for the poor is to give them a chance to gain skills and experience so they can move beyond that 3% of crappy jobs, even if that means they have to take crappy wages temporarily. I lived with my granny as I took an unpaid internship, then gained skills and wages high enough to move out, and I'm not ashamed. It's certainly better than remaining unemployed and not gaining any employable skills.
Why do we only offer the privileged who've been to college to have internships and gain skills, while not allowing the underskilled the same opportunity to prove their worth before making a decent wage?
Hell, there's plenty of white guilt to where they'd love to stroke their ego by giving employment to minorities/poor who really need it, but businesses aren't charities. They aren't going to do so to the detriment of turning a profit. Most businesses just can't afford to do so.
Finally, I can't stand when people claim that workers are being exploited, when they have freedom of choice too. If a worker is willing to work for a particular wage, then obviously it is worth it to them over the alternatives. Why do you hate the poor to not give them a choice what they're willing to work for? Why would you prefer they be unemployed?
Now as for how we can raise wages, that is a more complicated issue (natural factors such as competition contribute to employees being willing to work for less), but if the stated reason why we need minimum wage is to "keep up with inflation", then are wages the problem or is inflation? If people had more of their own money and savings to invest and spend, and we had a free economy, then yes, you are correct "people are paid more, they have more money to spend on goods and services creating demand for other jobs".