VIDEODROME
Member
- Joined
- Sep 16, 2007
- Messages
- 5,407
I think this should be addressed by Unions and Collective Bargaining. The government's only role would be to enforce the resulting contract.
Not if you live in a right-to-work and right-to-be-fired state.
If the place of business does not contract with unions, what then?
That's clearly false.
Historically, every single raise in the minimum wage has led to the unemployment rate being higher than it would have been if the mw weren't raised.
This is as indubitably true as 2+2=4.
Hmm. Don't see anything mentioning the impact of previous (or any) minimum wage hikes but thanks anyways.
A firm would not produce a single thing if it doesn't expect consumption of said thing. A firm will produce according to consumption levels.What the OP needs to understand is that it is production that drives consumption, not the other way around. Tricking people into thinking that they have produced more than they really have by forcing their employers to pay them more does not create more wealth the way real production increases do. It simply shifts wealth around, and not even very much of that. It is empty-headed feel-good legislation.
What the OP needs to understand is that it is production that drives consumption, not the other way around. Tricking people into thinking that they have produced more than they really have by forcing their employers to pay them more does not create more wealth the way real production increases do. It simply shifts wealth around, and not even very much of that. It is empty-headed feel-good legislation.
What the OP needs to understand is that it is production that drives consumption, not the other way around. Tricking people into thinking that they have produced more than they really have by forcing their employers to pay them more does not create more wealth the way real production increases do. It simply shifts wealth around, and not even very much of that. It is empty-headed feel-good legislation.
I agree that raising the minimum wage won't do much positive for the economy (or really that much negative either).
If a MW bill passed congress and was signed into law, what would the MW workers do with the higher amount of cash they are now earning? Would they not spend it, thus increasing the sales and productivity of companies and stores experiencing the new demand? Wouldn't this new demand cause business owners to produce more, thus increasing the amount of jobs available?
A firm would not produce a single thing if it doesn't expect consumption of said thing. A firm will produce according to consumption levels.
I hate this argument that somehow, magically, a business will get back more than it is forced to pay out. Suppose company A makes widgets. The widget costs 1 dollar to make and sells for 1 dollar and 30 cents. Now suppose the govt forces that business to pay 1 million more in wages. The absolute best case scenario is that those employees spend the entire 1 million in extra wages buying widgets from their employer which would be a profit of 300K. So the BEST CASE would be that the business would lose 700K since they had to spend 1 million more in wages! Thanks for you help, Uncle Sam!!!!
I agree that raising the minimum wage won't do much positive for the economy (or really that much negative either). I do question "production drives consumption." You need to balance both. If we build it they will come? If Chrysler makes more cars will people automatically buy them? Only if demand for more cars than are currently being produced exists. With real incomes being flat, consumers aren't demanding more goods- despite producing more. So fewer workers are needed to produce those goods. More unemployment.
Over the last several decades, productivity has soared. But the worker did not share in the benefits of their increased productivity. They produce more goods per hour of labor but don't receive (are not able to buy) more goods per hour worked. Nor has the higher productivity shown up in lower prices for goods. The vast majority of the benefits have gone to the owners of capital- the heads of the companies and their shareholders.