Points for page 3:
9/2/2013 2:03:55 PM
9/2/2013 3:29:31 PM
9/2/2013 3:59:35 PM
I love how corporations have convinced people in American to fight tooth and nail for their interests.Meanwhile in other countries:-People get paid more per hour-Get guaranteed leave up to months worth-Get guaranteed maternity leave-Paid healthcare-Paid benefitsIt's like we just love fucking ourselves over in this country at our own expense to benefit the rich.Congrats. We treat mothers works than Pakistan.[Edited on September 2, 2013 at 9:23 PM. Reason : ]
9/2/2013 9:22:44 PM
lol
9/2/2013 9:44:47 PM
9/2/2013 10:40:40 PM
eh...There are other factors, which are the non-ideal factors in resolution of the McD conflict. Unions also harm the customer of whatever industry they focus on. If you have industry-wide power, then higher wages can be propagated back to the consumer. If you only have power over the workforce in a single company, then that company may be forced to take the hit themselves (and also reduce plans for expansion).So maybe you hate fast food. Then you would be in favor of the whole shebam getting unionized. What do you care if fast food prices go up? Again, assuming self-interest. I'm sure we have plenty of libertarians who hate fast food but will fight against coercive union power anyway.Can we even separate the fast food workers from the customers? Do they live in completely different social classes? I know a lot of joints give free meals for a certain number of hours worked (low marginal cost for a limited part of the menu).[Edited on September 2, 2013 at 10:48 PM. Reason : ]
9/2/2013 10:48:17 PM
If its not often said, ill go ahead and say it: Minimum wage hurts the poor.
9/3/2013 9:35:53 AM
Who else could it possibly hurt more? If the market value for your labor is minimum wage or less, and minimum wage is increased, then we should expect it to be harder for you to find a job; the difference between your actual labor value and the price floor on wages is now greater.On the plus side, doubling the minimum wage would be excellent news for any industries involved in task automation.
9/3/2013 9:51:19 AM
^ I'd say the middle-class (at least the lower end of it) has a good chance of being hurt a ton as well. You increase the minimum wage and inflation will go up. Most of the middle-class making more than minimum wage won't get an increase in pay because of floor being raised, or if their old pay was less than the new minimum wage they would get paid as much as the minimum amount now. Thus, they are now indirectly making less compared to what everything else now costs.
9/3/2013 1:38:14 PM
9/3/2013 3:30:43 PM
mcdonalds wage + has kids = recipe for disasterparents, step your game up.
9/3/2013 3:37:29 PM
The automation argument is bunk. That's the fate of a vast majority of unskilled/semiskilled people anyways over the next few decades (singularity, etc). Why delay the inevitable. The fact is we will have to come up with some other system for these people soon anyways.
9/3/2013 3:54:03 PM
[Edited on September 3, 2013 at 4:04 PM. Reason : Dbl post]
9/3/2013 3:56:51 PM
9/3/2013 4:22:37 PM
while on the subject of minimum wage, its worth noting that the majority of mcdonalds employees make above the minimum wage
9/3/2013 4:23:42 PM
Am I wrong here, I thought the workers were attempting to negotiate with management, not agitating for a higher min. Wage. Admittedly I haven't been reading many articles about it.
9/3/2013 4:43:32 PM
9/3/2013 5:04:08 PM
And then people make more, and are able to buy less, which is exactly what I was addressing in my post.
9/3/2013 5:06:11 PM
ITT people know nothing about economics.
9/3/2013 5:36:58 PM
9/3/2013 5:59:10 PM
9/4/2013 8:35:48 AM
he was talking about earnings, not production
9/4/2013 10:31:28 AM
Then the consumption got transferred to someone else.
9/4/2013 11:19:53 AM
finally!
9/4/2013 11:41:31 AM
9/4/2013 12:25:10 PM
Well that productivity compensated someone.
9/4/2013 12:35:14 PM
...else
9/4/2013 12:51:08 PM
Wow, who knew people were working so much harder relative to compensation? I wonder why that graph tracked the same up to a certain time period...It's almost as if something had been introduced that allowed productivity to increase without expending more man hours.
9/4/2013 12:55:30 PM
9/4/2013 12:57:42 PM
9/4/2013 1:08:36 PM
nothing about that post counters his point, God's post is more relevant to his.
9/4/2013 1:17:41 PM
God's post is somewhat relevant. It really depends on how a company does its accounting. If the cost of automation is capitalized vs. classified as an operating expense it's going to make profits look higher. In most cases I would guess it is capitalized.[Edited on September 4, 2013 at 1:35 PM. Reason : sdfsd]
9/4/2013 1:35:04 PM
The point is that CEO pay has gone up 300% and the minimum wage has gone down -9.3%. Let me know how that makes sense. Or is it just capitalism at it's finest?
9/4/2013 2:33:13 PM
Average pay still increased.....
9/4/2013 3:05:11 PM
9/4/2013 3:10:27 PM
^^Yeah I guess a 9% increase is an increase. Why are those poors complaining? *flies away in rocket-powered yacht*
9/4/2013 4:28:21 PM
9/4/2013 4:35:11 PM
And that production goes to labor that is absurdly, dramatically, lower price than in the US.That's in spite of "productivity" increasing domestically. Ultimately, that's just leveraging the increase in domestic consumption even further! It's like there's some giant consumption black hole.
9/4/2013 4:43:41 PM
Well, sort of. If you ignore the service economy and the fact that we have deficit spending among large swaths of the US population.It's been quite a long time since we've been a net exporter. Actual physical production is important, but it's not the only type of economy that exists.[Edited on September 4, 2013 at 4:50 PM. Reason : sdfsdf]
9/4/2013 4:50:15 PM
I'm not sure if exports matter. Some convincing arguments have been bringing me over to that side.Say that you have Chinese people invest in US assets and US people invest in Chinese assets. Now imagine that the financial industry culture is different in both nations. So the US investments in China return more than the Chinese investments in the US.That will lead to a sustained trade deficit for the US. The reason is that it gets an investment dividend over their Chinese counterpart. The Chinese person pays for this swap in the form of a few more manufactured goods.If you look at Chinese purchases of US treasuries, it doesn't tell you much, but one of the few things it does tell you is that China has been putting large amounts of assets in very low yielding US holdings. It's almost certain that some counterpart US investment in China gets a better return. Thus we conclude that portfolio composition accounts for at least some of the deficit, and that can be sustained forever.Government debt largely represents a financial transfer. Lower taxes were paid in exchange for a future obligation. The problem I have is that it mucks with the principles of a democratic tax code. No particular name is on that debt. Deficit spending still is justified in terms of stimulating consumption, but I have problems understanding the fundamentals of that beyond the economic cycle itself - and the practical use of deficits is very far beyond that.My pet conspiracy theory right now is that QE is an interest rate swap with the government. If the government were to issue treasuries and use that money to invest in the stock market they would trivially make a killing. They could own the entire goddam thing in a generation. This isn't exactly what's happening mechanistically, but I think it boils down to that. If it were so desired, that would be a cheap inroad to de-facto socialism.The "problem" is ostensibly that people either refuse to spend or refuse to save, and that's unstable no matter how you cut it. I'm sure that the minimum wage wouldn't be necessary if not for that reality, but I also don't know if there's a way to escape from that reality.
9/4/2013 5:46:59 PM
9/18/2013 1:37:41 PM
If the minimum wage had stayed up with inflation, it would be around $33/hour. I think $22/hr is a far more reasonable minimum wage, as Elizabeth Warren has mentioned.
10/2/2013 1:43:01 PM
you think minimum wage should be almost $46,000 per year? jesus dude.
10/2/2013 6:09:17 PM
Honestly, I wish they would just make the minimum wage 20, 30, 40 dollars an hour, whatever people are saying it needs to be, to prove how devastating it would be to the economy.
10/2/2013 6:49:06 PM
Well, prices adjust to allocate scarce resources. Imposed slowly over time, the economy would survive a $40/hour minimum wage just fine. It is the millions thrown into unemployment that would be devastated.
10/6/2013 3:44:24 PM
10/7/2013 5:59:07 PM
10/7/2013 7:06:20 PM
Where are you going to get that 46k to give them? Fast food/grocery store/retail economies just don't hold up to that kind of cash.You start paying these people 46k per year, and your collegiate academic base starts to dwindle, because whats the point of paying for college when a good majority of the college majors you love so much pay that type of salary or less.
10/7/2013 7:16:10 PM
10/7/2013 8:02:55 PM