NOT THE FRUITS OF MY LABOOOORRRRRRRR!!!!!!ANYTHING BUT THAAAAATTTTT
7/18/2009 12:47:12 PM
7/18/2009 10:26:34 PM
What needs explaining? Only a small fraction of federal spending actually goes to the poor. The rest goes to people that I doubt you would consider poor.
7/19/2009 9:33:28 AM
^Don't be coy. Spell it out. How are the rich getting gov't welfare?
7/19/2009 10:47:58 AM
7/19/2009 10:51:07 AM
7/19/2009 11:09:33 AM
I'm still trying to figure out why it takes more workers to cook food at Smithfields than it does at McDs.
7/19/2009 11:16:55 AM
^ McDonald's has a hell of a good engineering department that optimizes everything in the place. Go into to a well run McD's and watch. Automated drink dispensing, everything is in it's place, etc... Runs like a clock. It's a lean operation.
7/19/2009 2:31:54 PM
because McD's doesn't "cook" their food.
7/19/2009 2:43:39 PM
I wish. It's hard to find a good rare burger....
7/19/2009 3:47:10 PM
i was a white castle the other day and they were cooking meat on a flat top it was hilarious.
7/19/2009 4:02:26 PM
So, no reason to believe Smithfields can't do that either.Rather than try and rationalize what LoneSnark posted, lets just chalk it up to another single variable ridiculous scenario he made up to try and prove a point.Like this one for example
7/19/2009 5:01:55 PM
I think you guys have minimum wage confused with a living wage, which causes a constant outward spiral of rising prices on both ends.The problem with eliminating the minimum wage at this point is that people have come to expect it. They would not be willing to accept anything less. The only people who might would be illegal immigrants, who should be required to make minimum wage anyway (since that would destroy any incentive to hire them). The initial market response might be slow, unless it resulted in raised recruiting and training costs, since some people would be stupid enough to take a stupid wage and then readily quit, since those types of jobs are inherently crappy.
7/19/2009 6:13:33 PM
7/20/2009 12:10:23 AM
well having free labor would be the best bet for most companies.we already had a war over it.
7/20/2009 1:14:55 AM
7/20/2009 9:19:17 AM
It is called a thought experiment. It is how things in economics are considered. My point is that there is no mechanism with the magnitude to compensate for the hit from the minimum wage, as such jobs will be destroyed. You mentioned the demand boosting effect, so I determined just how big that could possibly be, and it came up to nothing close to the wage hit. So what is your point? That the real world is too messy to know anything? That there are too many variables to say for sure the minimum wage will destroy jobs, so we should raise it? Even if that is your point, it is absurd: have you never heard of the precautionary principle? I admit, some economic processes are quite complicated, but this is not one of them. All it does is move money around among a few stake holders, with predictable results: less employment. And this being an internet forum, there is no need to write full papers, just presenting the abstract should always suffice to present mechanisms and give a sense of magnitude.
7/20/2009 9:42:29 AM
7/20/2009 10:09:48 AM
If we're so worried about helping the finances of the working poor, why not eliminate the regressive payroll tax on them.Get rid of the min. wage so more people will be hired, and spare them the pain of taxing their first dollar and sending it to some retiree in Florida.
7/20/2009 11:03:17 AM
7/20/2009 11:47:36 AM
7/20/2009 12:14:12 PM
7/20/2009 2:06:06 PM
If twwers only made posts about topics that they're qualified to discuss, there would'nt be a single topic in the Soap Box.
7/20/2009 3:09:45 PM
Clearly, that is exactly what I said when I compared a nobel laureate to a poster on the wolfweb talking about intensely complex macro economic policy topics.
7/20/2009 4:23:51 PM
7/20/2009 7:23:08 PM
7/20/2009 9:21:09 PM
Or we can look at all the other studies that demonstrated the exact opposite. Or we can be rational thinkers and try to understand the subject at hand. The economics does not get much simpler than price floors. Clearly you do not go in for that, so why are you here? The only conclusion you are willing to assert is pro-minimum wage, yet when we make assertions to the contrary you fall back to "then what makes you think the rest of us can do the discuss any value adding?" So which is it? Is the minimum wage supported by the evidence or do you not feel competent enough to draw any conclusion? If it is the former, then respond to the criticism and stop ducking under the table. If it is the latter then go away, you have nothing to contribute. And stop saying this question is complex, it is not; few subjects in economics are simpler than price fixing.
7/20/2009 10:34:17 PM
7/20/2009 10:39:21 PM
7/20/2009 11:21:57 PM
I think about the best anyone in here outside of an actual economics professor can do is have an idea and at least post links to reviewed work to support their assertions.When I look around for literature on the minimum wage, the vast bulk of it seems to have been created before 1985. I don't care quite enough to go and tally all the years, I just eyeballed it.Aside from the Krueger study which is newer than 1985, studies I found recently included commentary about the standard model for wages and challenges to the standard model that could account for the empirical observations Krueger made. The fact that economics still evolves, the fact the economists continue to epically fail in their predicitons, and the fact that there are so many schools of thought about it where major policy is concerned is why I don't care to debate on any rational level with someone like you who is so arrogant, so fucking cavalier, so sure of his knowledge that he'll just concoct any old scenario he thinks makes partial sense and slaps it down in a thread and thinks he is adding real value to the conversation. You need to take some notes from Hunt. He rarely makes an argument without something fairly respectable backing up his post. You don't have the clout or reputation to just post anything and have us take it at face value...again, where major policy is concerned.[Edited on July 20, 2009 at 11:35 PM. Reason : .]
7/20/2009 11:34:09 PM
I don't feel like coming here to do research. I do enough of that at work. As such, I presented an argument in the form of a simplified model of reality. If I made a logical error then point out where. If making my model less simplified in some way would reverse the outcome, then say how. But I see no reason why something as easy to comprehend and analyze on a micro-economic basis as a wage price floor needs to resort to a battle of the experts, especially when it is clear that there are experts on both sides of the isle.
7/21/2009 1:06:06 AM
7/21/2009 8:13:25 PM
I have no opinion of Global Warming. A 100 page thread (or whatever it is up to now) where I occasionally click on it and see the exact same arguments and charts over and over again is enough of a reason for me to not mess with it. Seems...religiony.
7/21/2009 8:29:12 PM
7/21/2009 8:50:08 PM
^ I agree. Ideology can play a significant role for both liberal and conservative/libertarian economists (and especially so in macroeconometrics where assumptions almost entirely drive the output)That is why it is especially telling when nearly 75% of economists agree that minimum wage is distortionary despite nearly 75% being democrats.* *Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2004/11/18/education/18faculty.html?_r=1&pagewanted=print
7/22/2009 8:23:33 AM
Economist, Walter Williams, in his 1983 PBS documentary:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7DS0XXFdyfI(The above is part II. If interested in parts I & III: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P1r-r6iLBEI&feature=related & http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NUtY80fv56M)[Edited on July 23, 2009 at 12:49 PM. Reason : .]
7/23/2009 12:43:19 PM
7/23/2009 1:48:09 PM
Another "real world" example of how minimum wage has adverse effects:
7/26/2009 8:23:11 AM
why is this thread still going?most understand the impact of minimum wage increases and currently it seems like a poor decision but to completely write it off as a horrible thing is also pretty stupid.also also most countries without a formal minimum wage are mildly socialist western European countries
7/26/2009 10:02:45 AM
7/26/2009 12:06:59 PM
You are assuming the rise in wages fully offsets the decrease in hours. You also are not factoring in the reduction in output. On a side note - I'm still curious why those who favor minimum wage do so over an EITC.
7/26/2009 1:31:47 PM
I am speaking from the workers' point of view. They don't give a shit about output.
7/26/2009 2:04:45 PM
7/26/2009 3:13:59 PM
Preface: I'm not an economist. I'm a policy analyst, but I do environmental and energy work, not anything related to labor economics. But it seems like there's been clamoring in this thread for a thought model that could support an increase in employment related to an increase in minimum wage, and since no one else has provided one, I thought I'd give it a stab. Feel free to shoot it down in typical TWW fashion. I'm not coming down on one side or the other of this debate, merely positing a situation that could in some circumstances produce the results that Card and Krueger found for some industries--I make no claims about how this would generalize across the entire low-wage labor market.Everyone is so keen to discuss the effects of minimum wage on firms' hiring practices, but we seem to sometimes forget that employment is a two-way street--workers have to be willing to work, and this is particularly important to remember when talking about wage floors in a society that also provides welfare support for the poor. A quick search of the intertrons produces the following graph illustrating the real income adjusted for inflation of a full-time (40 hrs/wk) minimum wage worker, as compared to the federally-defined poverty line:If you accept that the poverty line has some approximate relationship to the reservation income of an average low-wage, unskilled individual through the availability of social welfare programs, then it seems plausible here that a sizable number of individuals might choose welfare over employment at minimum wage. In the same way that you're all arguing the classic micro "platitude" that increasing minimum wage reduces firms' demand for labor, it should also induce more workers to seek employment. If there are industries for which minimum wage is close to the uncapped equilibrium wage, or for which they face difficulty attracting enough workers at the current minimum wage, then it seems feasible that an increased min wage could still cause a net increase in employment. Think of a firm that wants to hire 50 workers at min wage but they can only regularly employ 40 because the work is pretty shit; if the min wage is increased, maybe now they only demand to hire 45 workers, but the higher wage induces 5 more people to be willing to do the work. All other criticisms about wage floors, efficiency, and social welfare aside, I can imagine this situation could exist. Perhaps this phenomenon, combined with issues like Hunt's article where some firms reduce hours rather than employee numbers, could go some way towards explaining counterintuitive results. Like I said before, I wouldn't expect this to be the case in all industries, but it might help explain why the increased employment result shows up in some studies that just look at one sector like fast food.I don't have any good idea about labor statistics, but do the benefits from social welfare systems get adjusted for cost of living and inflation more often than the minimum wage does? I'm guessing from the graph above that the federal minimum wage has only been changed about four times in the last 30 years?
7/26/2009 7:02:20 PM
7/26/2009 7:41:08 PM