Also,http://www.slate.com/articles/life/culturebox/2013/08/tipless_restaurants_the_linkery_s_owner_explains_why_abolishing_tipping.htmlWhat Happens When You Abolish TippingI got rid of gratuities at my restaurant, and our service only got better.
10/7/2013 8:12:27 PM
10/7/2013 9:47:04 PM
I think you had a case of tl;dr if you did not think that article was relevant to the point I was making. Let me put together some cliff notes on how we went from valuing every employee and providing wages that allowed a living wage for everyone, to focusing on increasing the shareholder value at all costs, including cutting salaries, pensions, and jobs in general:
10/7/2013 9:58:17 PM
lol no he doesn't.
10/7/2013 10:05:40 PM
Switzerland is going ahead with this kind of stuff:Switzerland Will Vote to Give All Adults a Guaranteed $2,800 Monthly Incomehttp://www.policymic.com/articles/66677/switzerland-will-vote-to-give-all-adults-a-guaranteed-2-800-monthly-income
10/7/2013 10:38:24 PM
^^Yes he does, but you are welcome to pick at his posts and give us your thoughts
10/7/2013 10:39:07 PM
^ Inflation is probably the wrong term for it, but the fact of the matter is when there's more money in the hands of consumers the market finds ways to absorb it. That's the fundamental truth of raising the minimum wage... all you're doing is raising the level of the poverty line.
10/8/2013 8:00:43 AM
10/8/2013 8:08:22 AM
^background noted. But you did sound like most Fox people would, at least until you mentioned tax credits and government programs.The problems with trying to eliminate poverty with the tax credits and subsidies vs raising minimum wage are as follows: It is not promoting employment (poor person on welfare gets same tax breaks as poor working person)Tax incentives either don't add that much money to poor working people's income (they are already in the lowest tax bracket) or it requires taking tax dollars from completely unrelated people and causes to pay for their welfare, as opposed to taking money directly from their employer (or the customers that they serve). I personally don't mind my taxes helping people in need, but I can see where some people will look at it as propping someone's profits with their tax money, and they wouldn't be wrong.
10/8/2013 10:17:01 AM
Capping executive pay to a factor of average worker pay is something we should do here, and I feel like it could be sold politically. I'd want to see that in place before I saw another min wage hike.
10/8/2013 10:31:50 AM
you're missing the pointRather than re-post the argument I've already made, I'm going to cheat and let someone else say it more concisely:Tax Structure vs. Minimum Wagehttp://www.americanteeth.org/2013/08/26/tax-structure-vs-minimum-wage/
10/8/2013 10:36:59 AM
That's some economic Harry Houdini bullshit. So raising minimum wage would create inflation and stifle labor market, because people will have more money to spend and employers will have to pay more out of pocket. But if you just make that into a separate transaction that would withhold the same money from employer and then pay it to the employee, and that will somehow punish big corporations more than small businesses? Because big corporations don't use creative accounting to hide minimize their profits (and sometimes turn them into losses)? And what if company is not making a profit, do their low-wage worker not receive this negative tax, or does it get covered by other funds in government coffers? Because if some companies are except from paying this tax, now there is not enough money to cover all the minimum-wage workers. And I completely fail to see how this is any better in fighting inflation than just raising minimum wage to the same level.Also, this system may look reasonable if the minimum wage is going up by 5-10%. If a more radical change is needed to bring minimum wage in line with living wage, which is likely, then you have a tax that approaches the wage itself, so now the "evel corporations" are still robbing their folks according to Dems and "evil government" is robbing the job creators according to GOP
10/8/2013 11:08:52 AM
but you agree with the premise that you can make taxes operate like a minimum wage?
10/8/2013 11:26:56 AM
Up to a certain percentage raises, yes, but I am still not convinced it would be more beneficial than a minimum wage raise. To me, using a tax approach is a more complex system that produces limited results, does not avert any pitfalls, and will likely to be opposed by more people.
10/8/2013 11:34:35 AM
but minimum wage burdens businesses. that might not be an issue for big employers, but it is one for many small employers. It also decreases the number of jobs available, because many jobs are no longer cost effective (this is generally where your economic textbook talks about elevator operators, etc...)By shifting it to a credit or subsidy system, you open up lots of new low-paying jobs that don't exist under a minimum-wage system and you can decide how much you want to open that up by where you set the subsidy/negative tax. The benefit is that it doesn't look different to the employee, and they now have more jobs. its better for the worker and the employer.also, if you want to stand by your position and the status quo, you need to first establish why it is the responsibility of business to provide a living wage and not the responsibility of society. I've made it easier for you by accepting and agreeing that the responsibility exists, which others in here will not agree with. (I, however, think the responsibility is on society and not employers)[Edited on October 8, 2013 at 11:46 AM. Reason : .]
10/8/2013 11:39:24 AM
10/8/2013 12:07:00 PM
10/8/2013 12:14:09 PM
Sentence dissection allows me to address specific points or flaws that I see with your argument. It is, in my view, better than typing some pre-formulated answer that does not address half of the points the previous poster made.
10/8/2013 12:34:25 PM
reformat and post again please
10/8/2013 12:35:21 PM
Maybe this subsidy could get these people off other tax funded programs?
10/8/2013 12:39:41 PM
Society, through government, regulates business enterprise so it can contribute to the improvement of the society. Taxation of profits and minimum wage are two very basic ways to make sure companies are giving back to society, not just taking from it. Workers should be protected by society from low wages for the same reason women should be protected from working in prostitution. People that have means but do not have morals will pray on people who are vulnerable, and use those people for their own benefit. You are not a hero just because you decide to give a hungry dog a bone, and then put him into a dog fight to make money off of it. I am for social net for people who are in need, but the employers put them in that situation should take up the responsibility. If someone has a job, working for someone else, where they spend forty hours a week, they should be able to afford a decent living just with their salary. We've already established the need for it, and that's why there are minimum wage laws. All we are arguing about is what that "decent living" standard should be. I am not against corporate tax supporting negative tax, or combination of thereof, but I don't see why other tax funds should support someone's employees when if that someone can actually afford to pay them enough to support themselves.
10/8/2013 12:39:52 PM
When you are "protecting" someone from a low wage job, what are you protecting them from? You seem to imply because they should be guaranteed protections in life, they should be guaranteed that they have access to a certain standard of living. the problem is that I've already agreed with that, I stated explicitly that its true.You haven't yet explained why its the responsibility of a private business to guarantee that someone has access to a certain standard of living and not the responsibility of society. If someone makes a decision, of their own free will with no coercion, to work a job then why should they not be allowed to do that. Why should two free people not be able to enter an agreement to provide labor for certain wages? this is what you need to answer.(also, prostitution should be allowed)
10/8/2013 12:47:10 PM
10/8/2013 1:18:45 PM
but the government can still work to level the playing field if there is no minimum wage, in fact they could do it more effectively and more people would be able to choose to work. and you still haven't established why its the responsibility of a private employer and not society to provide a certain quality of life. your response is circular logic, you are saying "the way it is now is right because its the law, its the law because it is right." you haven't even begun to establish a moral, philosophical, or economic defense.
10/8/2013 1:23:45 PM
Because I don't think I needed to defend what's right. Private employer uses the society's resources, so it must abide by society's laws. Going into moral, philosophical, or economic defense of why that is the case is way beyond the scope of this thread, do I need to rehash the entire purpose of the government? If you are for pure unrestricted capitalism, then just say so and provide some examples where that system worked well for the society in general. Maybe establish a establish a moral, philosophical, or economic defense of such system, while you are at it.
10/8/2013 1:45:06 PM
So if our law is what's right, then why do you want to increase minimum wage? By your logic it is correct where it is today and always will be. Do you see how your circular logic fails?No where have I been for pure unrestricted capitalism, and I've stated clearly and explicitly that I'm pretty far from it. But minimum wage is not an effective way to guarantee that people have an acceptable quality of life. I've proposed an alternate to minimum wage that has the same effect to the employee, however you want the status quo. Please explain why it is the responsibility of the employer to ensure a certain quality of life for an employee that has free will. If someone wants to work for $5/hour, and no one is coercing them, why should they not be allowed to?
10/8/2013 1:48:53 PM
no one "wants" to work for $5, the existing system is coercing them. You don't see the forest for the trees.
10/8/2013 1:56:09 PM
how do you know that no one is willing to work for $5? If they currently are making $0 per hour because they can't find a job, and are willing to work a job that becomes available at $5 per hour, why should they not be allowed to?[Edited on October 8, 2013 at 2:04 PM. Reason : that was the biggest thing i learned living in shitty places, that some people just want to work]
10/8/2013 1:59:40 PM
Of course, as long as there is unemployment and no other safety net options, someone, somewhere, will be able to work for $5. In some other countries, that may be a livable wage. Sometimes, maybe they are learning something or building something for themselves that they consider "nonmonetary payment" and that makes it worth the (temporary) pain. But when a majority of the country's population spends at least a year below poverty line, while the top 1% makes so much money off of it that it owns more than the first 90% of people combined, that is not good for economy, crime rates, or political stability.When someone is so desperate for money that they would murder someone else for a pair of shoes, when people lose their home when if they miss one paycheck, when people have to work two or three jobs and they still struggle to feed, shelter, and educate their kids, government should step in and not allow this to happen. That's what the good ole' government is there for.I don't know what kind of shitty places you lived in where "some people just want to work" but I never met a person that wanted to work for $5 but refused to work for even a cent more than that. Maybe slaves were doing just fine, you know they had a roof over their head, they were fed, and they were the kind of people that just wanted to work? Oh, they didn't have their freedom, you say? Then what about serfs? They were "free to go" any minute, right?[Edited on October 8, 2013 at 2:30 PM. Reason : I'm done with this]
10/8/2013 2:26:29 PM
So I don't take any huge issues with the argument you've presented, but I do question the level of the minimium wage increase. $15 is a substantial increase to the current minimium wage. Don't you think that more than doubling the minimium wage could have some unexpected effects? Why not just raise the federal min. wage to $10 and see how that goes for a few years before going up to $12 and then to $15?
10/8/2013 2:58:15 PM
^^ The safety net should exist completely independently of minimum wage. Your comment about people desperate for money shows that you are still completely missing my point. Minimum wage is a terrible way to provide a safety net, all it does it keep some people from working. People should be allowed to work for whatever wage they want, and a seperate safety net should exist to make sure that they are not that desperate for money. We should ensure that everyone has a certain standard of living, but a minimum wage is not an effective or efficient way to do that. and again, you still haven't explained why its the employers responsibility to ensure that a worker can meet a certain standard of living and not society's. if you don't want to explain that, you should acknowledge to yourself that you can't and then go back and read my proposal again. Maybe you think I am saying they should be left on their own? They should not, but a minimum wage is not helping them effectively.[Edited on October 8, 2013 at 4:11 PM. Reason : 's]
10/8/2013 4:04:41 PM
dtownralI'm done arguing about this anymore, as I'm pretty sure i'm just wasting time. Glad to have learned about the tax approach of fixing the issue, but still not convinced it's better than raising the minimum wage. I came back to post this relevant image, which just came across my FB news feedKris, "living wage" varies from area to area along with the cost of living. I did't make up that $15/hr number, it was just a number that was floating around. I know that DC was asking Walmart for a minimum of $12.50 in combined wage+benefits, so $15/hr is not that far off the mark in certain areas.
10/8/2013 9:43:16 PM
10/8/2013 10:04:03 PM
10/9/2013 4:22:43 PM
10/9/2013 7:20:35 PM
That is a really stupid fucking image. Retarded even.And in no way applies to the minimum wage discussion. You can have someone who makes 80k per year go out and buy a 700k home (for which I'm sure that person would be approved) and then he's only left with enough money for food, after paying for his shelter. So is he a slave (to who? The man??) as well?
10/9/2013 9:04:14 PM
Yeah poor people need to stop buying PPV Wrestlemania and shit.
10/9/2013 9:09:58 PM
http://www.takepart.com/article/2013/10/23/mcdonalds-recommends-federal-assistance-help-low-wages-and-benefits
10/24/2013 11:25:01 AM
10/24/2013 11:40:36 AM
Folks need to learn what the word "slave" means. You can walk away from a mortgage. You can walk away from a job. You couldn't walk away from a plantation as a slave.
10/24/2013 1:47:22 PM
IN ORDER TO BE A SLAVE YOU HAVE TO LITERALLY BE OWNED BY ANOTHER HUMAN BEING. THERE IS NO SUCH THING AS SYSTEMIC OPPRESSION
10/24/2013 1:56:02 PM
There is, but it's not called slavery, it's called systematic oppression.
10/24/2013 3:15:07 PM
Which are two completely different and unrelated things.
10/24/2013 3:18:35 PM
you should spend your time responding to the point and not that he should have used another word, you are turning it into a semantics argument(especially since by saying he should have used another word, you clearly still understood the point he was communicating)
10/24/2013 3:51:17 PM
Yes. Since $7.25/hour isn't enough to afford everything richer people believe you should have, we should force them to earn $0.00.
10/24/2013 3:58:09 PM
10/24/2013 4:31:28 PM
Everyone realizes that the fast food workers weren't trying to get a higher minimum wage right? They just wanted to negotiate higher wages with their employer, you know, how capitalism is allegedly supposed to work
10/24/2013 4:47:08 PM
wait...so they can afford a fridge and bottled (not tap) water? here's a tip...unscrew the light bulb. it wastes electricity (read: money).also, what's that on the bottom? butter or sausages?[Edited on October 24, 2013 at 5:01 PM. Reason : also, slavery means you get no earnings.]
10/24/2013 4:59:38 PM
10/24/2013 5:50:55 PM
Did any of the franchises or restaurants even officially unionize?I know SEIU was involved, but did they actually vote anywhere?
10/24/2013 6:26:43 PM