Since no one reads 49:Hunt
7/13/2009 6:08:30 PM
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7/14/2009 6:41:40 AM
7/14/2009 8:31:45 AM
7/14/2009 9:06:51 AM
^ not in liberal hippie fantasyland
7/14/2009 9:10:48 AM
The only people making minimum wage in this country are Wal-Mart employees and food-service staff. Even the immigrant maids at the Days Inn make $9 an hour.
7/14/2009 9:31:36 AM
Im not sure if someone has brought this up but it should be. And even if this is from getrichslowly.org im still posting it.
7/14/2009 9:44:10 AM
As it has been said before, many Labor Unions base their wages as a multiplier of the minimum wage, so you are giving these people raises too and increasing the cost of the work they do. It is not only the people that earn minimum wage, but the people who are paid based on the minimum wage rate.This is a cause-effect argument. People can debate for years and years which is the cause and the effect.Many people think inflation is the necessity for a minimum wage hike, while others think minimum wage hikes cause inflation (among other things). I would align myself in the latter category. Until we can figure out a way to make the dollar stronger and more valuable, this will remain a cause-effect argument with no true winner.
7/14/2009 9:49:32 AM
i'm not sure how a labor union choosing to base their wages on a multiple of the minimum makes a higher minimum the bad guyi meanpretty sure the union could easily adjust its figure to compensate in the interest of sustainabilityWE HAVE NO CHOICE BUT TO PAY OUR EMPLOYEES THREE TIMES THE NUMBER LEGISLATED it just don't cut ice
7/14/2009 9:58:05 AM
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7/14/2009 10:05:08 AM
businesses that make dumb decisions deserve to fail, etc.
7/14/2009 10:05:35 AM
so is this a union issue or an increased unemployment issue?because if only 1.4 percent of people over 25 make minimum wage then increasing minimum wage should only increase unemployment but a fraction of a percent if that.
7/14/2009 12:38:13 PM
7/14/2009 1:40:32 PM
Can I just say that if 300 dollars is going to make or break your little business than your business is on the edge of tanking regardless.
7/14/2009 2:00:20 PM
Hmm...take a $5/week paycut while working 5 hours less...
7/14/2009 2:01:35 PM
^^^i don't think i follow your math.if a manager has some fixed employee pay budget, how would the employees be losing money per week after a pay raise with no change in the size of the work force even if they had lost hours?
7/14/2009 2:10:31 PM
I think what he was getting at was that it would take $1200 a month more to get the same amount of work done.
7/14/2009 2:57:58 PM
that's not how i read it:
7/14/2009 3:00:27 PM
i don't think that (^*6) made any sense once I try to decode it, other than the same amount of work costs more, or you get less production for the money. bottom line is that it hurts the business by getting less work done for the same money (given that employee output remains the same), so they [the business owners] have to raise prices to cover their expenditures and maintain the same production. This, in turn, raises the cost of living --> inflation.the worker wont be hurt except by the cost of living, unless the boss decides their job isn't worth the minimum wage (i.e. non-critical). Those that do get to keep their jobs will actually see more $$$ in their checks, but everything will cost more.[Edited on July 14, 2009 at 3:21 PM. Reason : .]
7/14/2009 3:21:25 PM
7/14/2009 4:10:32 PM
7/14/2009 5:23:59 PM
^ Oh absolutely some businesses will be able to eat the costs (of course, all costs are passed on to the customer in the end) but as you point out, others wont without either reducing their employee count, the hours for the employees or implementing a hiring freeze. Also, to the point of the janitor lady, a lot of businesses contract that out, so while the lawyer can surely afford the extra money, it really won't come out of his pay because he just pays his contract rate. The janitorial company on the other hand, will have to pay, and though I can't speak from experience, I imagine they are closer to the fast food end of the employer type rather than the law firm end.But yes, it was a simplified example, but people seem to have this idea that businesses hire by the body count, not by the numbers and that's just not true. Yes, body count matters, but if the costs of hiring more bodies goes up, the business will either raise prices to compensate, or make do with less bodies, either way imposing more on the very people the wage hike is trying to help.
7/14/2009 5:56:41 PM
so they lose money because you've fashioned a rounding error that works in your argument's favor? got it. there's nothing saying that hours worked has to be a whole number. here's the straight math:average min wage employee weekly pay = (mw employee budget)/(number of min wage employees)if the number of employees doesn't change and the weekly mw budget doesn't change, how again will the average mw wage employee's wage change?[Edited on July 14, 2009 at 6:05 PM. Reason : .]
7/14/2009 6:05:06 PM
^^ Your parameters and constraints aren't all that realistic. The majority of the stores in the mall don't have 10 people working 30 hours a week... that is pretty large staffing for a "small business."In any case, the historical statistics don't bare out a plummeting or even noticeable reduction in low-wage unemployment that would be attributable to a rise in the minimum wage.You could spend all day concocting a multitude of contrived scenarios to show one point, or another, but there is not evidence i've seen that past raises in minimum wage did anything except increase the wages of the few minimum wage workers.
7/14/2009 6:15:45 PM
Because most of the time employers don't hire you for 25.7 hours a week. They usually hire you for blocks that are either on the hour or on the half hour. But even assuming they did work them 25.7 hours a week and thus each employee took home the exact same before tax pay, what the hell was the point of raising the minimum wage? So that they can each get .86 more hours each day to work their second job who will also cut their hours? If we're trying to raise the standard of living, increasing costs substantially relative to the increase in benefits is not the way to do it.
7/14/2009 6:19:27 PM
that's not how i think it works in the first place. i was just saying that your math in the first post is dubious.most likely the minimum wage people are there to do a specific job and that job will need to get done regardless of the cost (which is often minimal compared to other costs of the business). so likely the hours won't change much at all.
7/14/2009 6:22:06 PM
just curious, what classical economic element is at work when there is a minimum wage and yet the unemployment rate is <5% as it was until last year.
7/14/2009 7:02:46 PM
7/14/2009 8:54:24 PM
so what percentage of those affected aren't supported by someone else (like teenagers)?
7/14/2009 11:14:25 PM
7/15/2009 7:04:44 AM
More data on the economic effects of minimum wage (and similar wage policies tried during the New Deal)http://blogsandwikis.bentley.edu/themoneyillusion/?p=48
7/17/2009 7:15:01 AM
I dunno if I would call an economic professor's blog "data".
7/17/2009 8:33:59 AM
^ That's why you actually read the blog to find the data I am referring to.
7/17/2009 8:52:50 AM
How do you think I divined the blogger's identity?
7/17/2009 9:37:18 AM
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7/17/2009 1:03:39 PM
Unemployment doesn't have to go up when we raise the minimum wage.The employer could just cut his pay to pay his employees more.And I understand there are plenty of small business owners who can't afford to do this.But if I meet one more rich kid in a luxury car who tells me his dad owns and operates a string of fucking dry cleaners, I swear to goodness I'm gonna have to murder somebody. These small business owners seem to have plenty of money when they buy their kids the douchiest fineries...but mention raising the minimum wage and all of the sudden they're fucking broke. And I wouldn't care if they had done something valuable, but they usually haven't. They inherit some money, buy a dry cleaner, hire some employees and pay them nothing (and we're supposed to thank them for creating jobs), and then they sit on the profits until they get enough to buy another. There's nothing about this practice that says, "WOW! You should be rewarded with a half a million dollar home and a boat!" For some reason though, they're still walking around in half million dollar homes with boats out front, claiming they can't afford to raise the wages of their employees.But you guys point to the bizarre hobby shop owner who is truly broke and try to act like all small business owners are failing.And you should have to do more than just employ people to get your dick sucked by the government. We don't just need jobs. We need good jobs with good pay.
7/17/2009 1:35:59 PM
7/17/2009 1:56:34 PM
god bless ruben bollinglucky ducky should read atlas shrugged[Edited on July 17, 2009 at 2:31 PM. Reason : .]
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