just make it $20/hr.why not?make sure you keep fucking the teachers though, because otherwise the world would burn.
2/3/2014 8:19:01 PM
2/3/2014 8:33:34 PM
2/4/2014 12:42:38 PM
TerdFerguson
2/4/2014 3:56:03 PM
I think Republicans should actually agree to the hike, but demand that it be 25 or 35 dollars an hour, and refuse to accept anything lower than that. Yes, it will be disastrous for the very poor in the short-term, but long-term it will bury "progressive" economic black magic in the ground where it belongs.It's a win win for the GOP. If Obama refuses, then clearly he must hate the poor. He'd have to explain why such a high minimum wage is a bad idea, which would have to lead into a discussion about why we have a minimum wage at all.
2/4/2014 5:15:09 PM
2/4/2014 8:40:40 PM
2/4/2014 9:37:49 PM
2/4/2014 10:12:36 PM
2/4/2014 10:42:41 PM
^ but you aren't considering what the market was like before those "tweaks."Wage controls kept us competitive during WWII. A simple fix to sending 100,000s of our labor over seasBefore tuition subsidies, college was for the rich. Those tuition subsidies have given us one of the most flexible and educated working populations in the world.Requiring ER to treat people kept the lepers from piling up in the streets.We have pulled back on tweaks. See deregulation in the early 80s. I mentioned earlier that repealing laws can be just as important. We HAVE pulled back on Ag subsidies THIS YEAR - we ended direct payments, which are by far the most egregious subsidy in the farm bill.
2/5/2014 7:10:02 AM
2/5/2014 1:49:01 PM
2/5/2014 2:05:58 PM
Well, if a non-partisan blogger like Kevin Drum has something bad to say about Republicans, it must be true....
2/5/2014 2:40:38 PM
Paul Ryan is not, and hasn't really ever been, a voice of the general GOP agendaWe just got rid of the EITC in NC, getting rid of the EITC and negative tax rates is the GOP agendaHere is what he was referencing regarding 1995:http://www.nytimes.com/1995/09/19/us/clinton-defends-income-tax-credit-against-gop-cut.htmlHere are Republicans now:States:http://www.bizjournals.com/triangle/news/2013/03/13/mccrory-signs-bill-eliminating-tax.htmlhttp://www.njspotlight.com/stories/12/0807/2151/http://host.madison.com/news/local/govt-and-politics/walker-s-budget-slashes-tax-credits-that-aid-poor/article_e25ede58-b707-5876-9735-ecf0aa178e6d.htmlhttp://www.freep.com/article/20140109/NEWS06/301090125/michigan-gop-road-fundingetc...Federal:http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2013/03/14/ryans_blurred_vision_what_the_new_republican_budget_reveals_and_conceals_117433.htmlhttp://www.politico.com/story/2014/01/some-fear-eitc-obamacare-tax-credits-to-share-woes-102853.htmltheir track record is clear[Edited on February 5, 2014 at 3:20 PM. Reason : .]
2/5/2014 3:08:37 PM
so a prominent house republican's opinion on expanding the federal eitc from one month ago is irrelevant for how republicans will vote now.instead, let's see what Republicans at the state level or in 1995 have to say. ...okay. [Edited on February 5, 2014 at 3:30 PM. Reason : ``]
2/5/2014 3:13:53 PM
you shouldn't trust any recent posturing by the GOP, it will be undone by Obama's support of an EITC Republicans haven't just not supported an EITC, they have actively fought to have it cut or removed for the past 20 years. It's true that it should fit their platform, but they don't understand that. To many idiot ideologues think its not fair when people get paid for not doing anything, and that's what they think it is anytime someone gets a tax rebate that more than they contributed in taxes. [Edited on February 5, 2014 at 3:34 PM. Reason : .]
2/5/2014 3:31:28 PM
Did you miss where I noted that George W. Bush expanded the EITC? I'm pretty sure he was President less than 20 years ago. I also mentioned that Bush's former advisers are rallying for its expansion in recent op-eds. I already linked to a blog post by Greg Mankiw from December. But there is more. Here is a good piece from January 10th by Glenn Hubbard, former Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers under Bush:
2/5/2014 3:46:07 PM
Bush was pretty progressive, a lot more progressive than the party now and more progressive than the party thenFrom 1999:Bush Criticism of GOP Proposal Surprised House
2/5/2014 3:49:00 PM
What about Mitt Romney and the 47% video? Then entire "Makers vs. Takers" and "everyone should have some skin in the game" memes that get so much service?The reality is, especially for politicians, you need to show me with your actions:S. 836 Working Families Tax Relief Act of 2013https://www.govtrack.us/congress/bills/113/s836currently in the senate finance committee, not a single republican co-sponsor. As far as I know its not expected to make it out of committee (not sure why). It strengthens the EITC, nearly doubles the maximum credit in a lot of cases. It allows for a much higher credit to go to people without any children (a very good change IMO). It also simplifies some elements of the EITC to make it easier to dispense and to help reduce fraud (EITC has one of the higher fraud rates for welfare programs). It also makes some changes to the Child tax credit that occurred in 2009 permanent.Now, maybe there is something buried in this bill that is a non-starter for Republicans and I skimmed over it (please correct me if so). Maybe it will make it out of committee and then it will get some bipartisan support - in which case I will gladly come back to this thread and eat crow. but will your mind change Socks`` if it makes it out of committee and barely gets any Republican votes????[Edited on February 5, 2014 at 4:29 PM. Reason : user tag effed it up]
2/5/2014 4:28:23 PM
2/5/2014 4:59:55 PM
2/5/2014 6:04:30 PM
2/5/2014 7:07:53 PM
^^ The recent run ups in profitability are in finance, education, and healthcare, industries which do not employ minimum wage workers. The industries that do employ minimum wage workers such as retail are just as profitable as ever: Not much. As such, how can you say pay has not kept up with productivity? That airplanes stay airborne does not revoke the law of Gravity. Similarly, that data does not always show the law of Demand does not revoke it either. If you raise employer costs by statute, some will find a way to stay open with fewer worker hours, some of them will opt not to expand, and some of them will shutdown. This will manifest itself into fewer job opportunities for minimum wage workers and enlarge the already huge army of the unemployable whose only job prospects are illegal. How does doing this in any way "provide stability to social structures"? The purpose of the minimum wage is to keep poor blacks and immigrants out and render the retail market safe for middle-class white teenagers.[Edited on February 5, 2014 at 7:17 PM. Reason : ^]
2/5/2014 7:16:38 PM
^^ I agree with everything you said, however there are other ways to offset the cost of college. There are work/study positions that students can get, as well as a part time job throughout the semester. I'm not saying it is right to have to do that, but it is an option. I believe that tuition costs are criminal, especially for subsidized schools such as those in the UNC system. How come nobody looks at ways to trim tuition down so the poor can actually afford anything other than a community college? There are only so many scholorships to go around.
2/5/2014 9:52:00 PM
A part time job is peanuts compared to the cost of college, a part time job and working in the summer was actually enough in the 70's, not now.has Soxks conceded that Republicans, for whatever reason, have been against EITC?[Edited on February 6, 2014 at 7:07 AM. Reason : ,]
2/6/2014 7:05:43 AM
2/6/2014 10:28:04 AM
2/6/2014 12:40:41 PM
no, my position is that the language has only changed in the last few weeks and you shouldn't count on it to continue since it will require them to agree with something Obama supports. You also shouldn't count on it to continue because Republicans have a clear history of being opposed to an EITC for the past 20+ years, and when that Republican president passed one he did so against the resistance and criticism from his own party (and the party has only become less progressive since then).[Edited on February 6, 2014 at 12:57 PM. Reason : .]
2/6/2014 12:56:15 PM
dtown, Your position has been changing as either google or myself provides you with new info. You went from "Republicans only support tax cuts for the rich" to "Republicans have opposed EITC for 20 years" to "Some Republicans have supported expanding EITC, but many also opposed it". If your current position is just that expanding EITC is not universally supported by all Republicans at all time, then I can't help but agree. But I still honestly believe that a majority of Republicans will support expanding the EITC as an alternative to raising the minimum wage. And recent comments made by leading Republicans only bolster that belief. I could be wrong. I will be disappointed if I am. But I think I have done a good job of demonstrating that expanding the EITC is not such an obvious political dead end that it should not be considered as an alternative (which was the initial criticism). There is a very real chance it could pass. So I don't know what more I can say on this subject, so I will let you have the last word on what Republicans "truly" believe.[Edited on February 6, 2014 at 3:21 PM. Reason : "Let me tell you what Republicans REALLY believe" said the Democrat. [/unbiased]]
2/6/2014 3:11:58 PM
i've had the same position this entire time, chief
2/6/2014 3:19:45 PM
Earlier I posted a link to an article where Paul Krugman makes the case for raising the minimum wage today. It is interesting that in arguing against a setting a minimum "living wage" in 1998 he laid out a position closer to my own. The article is interesting and I think does a fair job of arguing both sides. I wish he would revisit this article, since I would like to know what changed his mind (or if he really did).
2/6/2014 3:43:06 PM
The CBO has weighed in on the potential minimum wage hike to $10.10 per hour. http://www.cbo.gov/publication/44995The Bad News: They find a hike in the minimum wage to $10.10 will lead to a net loss of around 500,000 jobs.The Good News: If you are lucky enough to keep your low-paying job, you will be earning more income! They estimate that earnings will increase by $31 million. The Bad News: Just because you have a low-paying job, doesn't mean you are in a low-income family. According to CBO estimates, only 19% of that $31 million would accrue to families living in poverty. By contrast, 29% would accrue to families earning more than three times the poverty threshold.In other words, the public intentions of this policy are to help combat poverty. The results of policy will be to put many people's jobs in jeopardy and to primarily benefit families well above the poverty line.[Edited on February 19, 2014 at 1:11 AM. Reason : ``]
2/19/2014 1:10:01 AM
What? Pricing people out of a job doesn't help those people? Well, color me shocked!
2/19/2014 1:23:28 AM
^^well, if you drill down into the report their actual confidence interval ranges from "a very slight increase in employment to a loss of up to 1 million jobs." The 500,000 loss is just the central figure. So, IMO, job losses from a minimum wage increase are still debatable.Also, its $31 Billion not $31 million[Edited on February 19, 2014 at 8:36 AM. Reason : The way you read this report also depends on if you want to combat poverty or income inequality]
2/19/2014 8:33:34 AM
no, $10.10/hr is slight decrease to loss of 1 million gobs($9/hr is slight increase to loss of 200k jobs)
2/19/2014 9:21:20 AM
Terd Ferguson, Actually, you may want to double check that. See Table 1 in the full CBO report. It says the range of employment impacts for a wage hike to $10.10 will be between a very slight DECREASE and 1 million workers losing their jobs (not a slight increase). But you're right that I just reported the central estimate and that the true impact could be bigger or smaller. Of course, that's true of ANY point estimate. In either case, I think the more interesting finding is that very few of the benefits of a hike in minimum wage will go to the families in poverty. Something tells me that statistic will not make its way into any of President Obama's speeches anytime soon. ---On a different note, the full CBO report also discusses the EITC. Here is one interesting excerpt.
2/19/2014 11:39:32 AM
The poorest among us lose their jobs and middle class teenagers get a raise. The war on the poor continues apace.
2/19/2014 2:47:14 PM
Why would the poor stand to lose their minimum wage job over middle class teenagers?
2/19/2014 2:57:16 PM
how about whoever sucks at their job more lose their job?
2/19/2014 3:23:02 PM
Thats what I was thinking.
2/19/2014 3:25:31 PM
``[Edited on February 19, 2014 at 7:32 PM. Reason : ``]
2/19/2014 7:28:50 PM
They should make it 9/hr and have it scheduled to increase to $10.10 after the next presidential election. See who wanna repeal it?
2/19/2014 9:34:10 PM
What does it really matter anyway. Going from what it is now to 10.10 isn't really going to raise anyone out of poverty. It will just allow people to buy more junk.
2/20/2014 7:11:39 AM
yah, I realize there are two different scenarios. The only reason I quoted the "increase" in employment was to show its possible and capture the full range mentioned in the paper. If you look at the reason the CBO included the increase in employment in the paper, its because of the exact mechanism I described ITT.The kicker is they arbitrarily (well IMO, see page 27 of appendix A) reduce this effect by 10%.And reporting the central estimate in this case is kinda meaningless to me. Notice they don't call it the median estimate - its because they don't have a clue what the actual distribution of the data looks like. They use different effects they gathered from literature, adjust them slightly to better fit their uses, and then plug and chug it in their economic model. Absolutely nothing wrong with that method, but it doesn't explain why they are picking the central estimate as the number to report when they have the same confidence level in their entire range. I've only skimmed the report but haven't found the CBO mention anywhere what the range of estimates of the effect they tried, or if they weighted some of the estimates as more significant than others (ie. if two studies are very similar and one finds a more statistically significant effect, should it be weighted more heavily?). I guess what I was looking for was something more along the lines of:FYI, the CBO used -0.2 elasticity in their analysis (which isn't necessarily wrong, since the study this graph was pulled from was focused slightly differently)
2/20/2014 9:48:18 AM
Terd, Well, since they are two different policies, I personally wouldn't combine them. But I see what you were getting at.I also think you make a good point when you say that CBO doesn't know what the distribution of their data looks like looks like. They say there is a 75% chance the employment impact for a $10.10 hike will fall between 0 and 1 million workers. But they can't say what the mean or median point estimate would be (like you point out). That's why the central estimate they report is just a mid-point between the two polls.But I think the central estimate does have meaning. That meaning is that the economists at the CBO that compiled this report don't really believe that all outcomes between 0 and 1 million jobs lost are equally likely, even if they can't narrow their estimates down further. So they have used the mid-point of 500,000 jobs as a way of conveying that the impact probably won't be zero, but it probably won't be as bad as 1 million jobs lost either. In other words, it is a reflection of their judgement, not an explicit result of their analysis.At least that is how I interpret it (they don't explicitly state this in the report). This probably wouldn't hold up in a peer-reviewed academic publication, but academics have the luxury of sticking to questions they can answer well. Government economists with tight budgets, poor data, and a demanding client don't have that option.[Edited on February 20, 2014 at 10:46 AM. Reason : ``][Edited on February 20, 2014 at 10:49 AM. Reason : ``]
2/20/2014 10:46:35 AM
^Agree, especially with the CBO often tackling very difficult questions. I want to make it clear that I don't think this is a bad report or even that their estimates are incorrect, just that I think their work is being misrepresented in some important ways.
2/20/2014 11:28:50 AM
The GAP is raising their wages:http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/02/20/gap-minimum-wage_n_4826415.html
2/20/2014 10:01:31 PM
http://www.usatoday.com/story/money/business/2014/06/02/seattle-minimum-wage-vote/9863061/"Businesses employing more than 500 workers would be required to pay $15 an hour by 2017, or 2018 if health care is offered. Smaller businesses would have five to seven years to phase in the increase. Part of employees' tips and benefits could be applied toward the higher minimum for as long as 11 years."good experiment to see if they get replaced by robots i guess...
6/3/2014 12:58:03 PM
Saw this on facebook. The problem with its logic is that many in the private sector, and public sector for that matter, also have wages that haven't kept up with inflation. Especially in the last 6 years or so.
6/6/2014 7:38:22 AM
6/6/2014 8:39:03 AM