WOW DIDN'T SEE THIS COMING (sarcasm)See... unintended consequences. Politicians rarely see them/care about them.
2/12/2007 10:24:26 AM
If the cost of giving families a more livable wage is high schooler unemployment, that's a cost we can bear.
2/12/2007 10:25:50 AM
CANT MAKE AN OMELET WITHOUT BREAKIN A FEW EGGS!I thought this was the republican philosophy with everything.
2/12/2007 10:27:11 AM
This is just from the state's increase. The federal increase isn't even mentioned.
2/12/2007 10:27:37 AM
2/12/2007 10:28:22 AM
There are plenty of adults making minimum wage. It will also ripple up, b/c the older works are going to say, this kid got a raise, where's my raise?
2/12/2007 10:30:17 AM
Perhaps now those teenagers who were busy making money will go study more so that Europeans won't make fun of how stupid Americans are.
2/12/2007 10:30:46 AM
^^^ you are the fuckin dumb one.
2/12/2007 10:31:29 AM
your evidence to support that claim is breathtaking...
2/12/2007 10:33:35 AM
oh i was commenting on how walmart employs more than .000000001% of the population by themselves and most of those fuckers are well over high school age.
2/12/2007 10:34:41 AM
according to this:http://www.bls.gov/cps/minwage2005tbls.htm40.9% of minimum wage workers were 25 or over in 2005.minimum wage workers (exactly 5.15/hr) make up 0.3% of the >25 workforce and 3.2% of the 16-19 workforce.[Edited on February 12, 2007 at 10:42 AM. Reason : .]
2/12/2007 10:37:39 AM
back when this was being debated lots of articles mentioned the last wage hike and how these layoffs are just a short term effect. im not old enough to know how short term they were talking, but it would make sense.
2/12/2007 10:47:57 AM
i mean people like this pizza guy will either get more efficient with the workers they have, raise prices to cover the wage increase, or go out of business. i don't really see what the big deal is.
2/12/2007 10:50:51 AM
^seriously?Problem 1: more efficiency with fewer workers. THis is not a problem for me, I support more efficiency, but some people lose jobs.Problem 2: raise prices. So long to that whole livable wage the increase was supposed to create.Problem 3: go out of business. Enough said.
2/12/2007 10:54:21 AM
unless the business is seriously pathetic, the price increases would not be nearly as substantial as the wage increase (for a single person).[Edited on February 12, 2007 at 11:04 AM. Reason : .]
2/12/2007 11:04:02 AM
if a company cant deal with that then they shouldn't be open.wage increases is like a purging of poorly managed companies.
2/12/2007 11:06:20 AM
2/12/2007 11:16:23 AM
also most fast food pays a few cents more than minimum wage.
2/12/2007 11:18:56 AM
2/12/2007 11:22:40 AM
2/12/2007 11:27:53 AM
^^ the fundamental problem with this is that most "low paying" jobs still pay more than minimum wage. Even working at the Record Exchange I made 6 bucks an hour. Thats almost a dollar over minimum. The only companies truly effected are larger companies who employ huge numbers of high schoolers.^ regardless it was debunked. Also thats a fine example of Walmarts wage expenses going up less because the employees already get paid over minimum.[Edited on February 12, 2007 at 11:29 AM. Reason : ^^]
2/12/2007 11:28:07 AM
^that is because you live in North Carolina.
2/12/2007 11:30:06 AM
yes I do live in NC and everything I said applies to 70% of the country.
2/12/2007 11:37:02 AM
2/12/2007 11:55:11 AM
it's not the use of force. It's the market.
2/12/2007 12:07:17 PM
2/12/2007 12:09:50 PM
2/12/2007 12:37:39 PM
The fact that people who work need food stamps is a problem. It amounts to taxpayers paying employers payrolls. Also, if you needed medical care, who would have paid for it?
2/12/2007 12:43:14 PM
Ah, but we are forgetting a key component of the market system: substitution. At first, pizza joints start going out of business due to the higher labor costs; if they could just raise prices they would have already done so, the greedy bastards. As joints go foul they cut back production and compete less vigurously, allowing prices to rise. As the price of fresh pizza goes up, however, customers take stock of their lives and realize that while $5 is a great price for a fresh medium pizza, $7 is too much, when you can go to food lion and get a larger digiorno pizza for only $6 and throw it in the oven, no need to call anyone and no delivery charge. So, what we should expect to see is within a few months of the minimum-wage hike is a rash of layoffs as employers cut costs. Then, as prices rise customers cut back on consumption and thus cause another round of layoffs as businesses permanently close. So, this unempoyment is not transitory, it is permanent. If jobs existed for these workers at $7 an hour they would have already taken them; since they did not we can only draw one conclusion from their actions.
2/12/2007 12:46:33 PM
We could use a few less pizza places around here.
2/12/2007 12:49:22 PM
2/12/2007 12:50:43 PM
Are you suggesting jobs existed that paid $7 an hour but the workers did not take them because $5.15 was plenty?Patman, note pizza consumption does not necessarily fall, just the source of pizza changes. [Edited on February 12, 2007 at 1:02 PM. Reason : .,.]
2/12/2007 1:01:51 PM
The bottom line is that businesses will always try to use our society's safety net to subsidize their payrolls. This subsidy artificially lowers payrolls so the minimum wage is need to artificially raise payrolls, keeping things in check.
2/12/2007 1:08:45 PM
2/12/2007 1:28:59 PM
god there are a lot of ugly, unintelligent posts in this thread.If one of the following belongs to you, tuck your head between your legs and make your way to TRACS in the coming weeks and sign up for any course with an "EC" prefix.
2/12/2007 1:37:02 PM
2/12/2007 1:55:50 PM
^^So you don't like my posts but can't offer anything to refute them?^ That's ignoring a lot of things, like how people would resort to crime to make ends meet, starve to death, turn out their children, give up, commit suicide, etc. The market is only one aspect in these sorts of issues. You can't ignore our values and needs as a society just because it doesn't result in maximum market efficiency. The market works for us, not the other way around.[Edited on February 12, 2007 at 2:03 PM. Reason : ?]
2/12/2007 1:57:19 PM
^ My sole point was that you were 100% incorrect. You said subsidies for the poor allowed low wage employers to pay less. This is incorrect, the subsidies make low wage employers pay more. My personal opinion is that subsidies for the poor, particularly the EITC, are extremely beneficial, cheap, and maintain a flexible labor market. A minimum wage does the exact reverse: it hurts those it is designed to help, is quite costly for the rest of society, and damages the flexibility of the labor market.
2/12/2007 2:08:55 PM
2/12/2007 2:09:09 PM
What is there to refute? You are advocating inflation and saying who cares if businesses close...Common sense would tell you that you're on the wrong side of the issue here.
2/12/2007 2:17:16 PM
2/12/2007 2:23:38 PM
look at what it has done for america so far. disaster i tell you.
2/12/2007 2:27:49 PM
I don't know about "disaster", like most forms of regulation, the poison is in the dosage. A $5.15 minimum wage is manageable on a macroeconomic level (on a local level it can still be disasterous, but people can migrate, thus mitigating the damage).
2/12/2007 2:30:40 PM
^^ Thats because for the most part the equilibrium wage is above minumum wage.However, if the minumum wage ever surpasses the equilibrium wage it could do a lot of damage to our economy. And like ^^^ he said, it's potentially dangerous because its a political winner.Some people are stupid and will fall for anything. Hell there are people who are actually considering voting for John Edwards. Its a scary thought but thats why we all have to do the best we can to make sure the right information is out there.[Edited on February 12, 2007 at 2:34 PM. Reason : a]
2/12/2007 2:34:19 PM
Oh I see, there are two sides to every issue, right and wrong.
2/12/2007 2:35:56 PM
^ My sole point is still that you are 100% incorrect. You said subsidies for the poor allowed low wage employers to pay less. This is incorrect, the subsidies force low wage employers pay more. If you want to drive wages up then you need to reduce employment. You can do this voluntarily by increasing the EITC, thus encouraging workers to seek reduced hours. Or, you can do it directly by getting a percentage of the workforce layed off, such as with the minimum wage. You choose. In the first scenario all workers are better off. In the second scenario only those lucky enough to keep their jobs are better off, everyone else either goes on welfare, finds illegal work, or dies.
2/12/2007 2:45:53 PM
I understand the whole argument about minimum wage increase and layoffs and whatnot.But I don't get the whole thing. CEO pay has gone up 450% since 1992. 450 percent! Nevermind some of those astounding golden parachutes and such. Non-Ag production went up 18%, but the workers's wages only went up 1%. The cost of housing exploded, but wages remained about the same so women have to work, which means there is childcare to be paid for. Shoot, in real terms, minimum wage has actually been declining for years. Cost of living went up dramatically, and wages were just like, "Hey, wait for us! Wait up! Don't leave us!" And all that was 40 years ago...so is this how the system is supposed to work? Are people supposed to work more and more for less and less while the CEOs get loaded? That's what it seems like to me.
2/12/2007 2:57:34 PM
Well, I don't think you have it quite right. Civilian Worker Compensation has gone up 3.3% just in 2006, so I find the assertion that it only went up 1% since 1992 very unlikely. Also, information technology has allowed today's corporations to grow much larger, it only seems logical for their quantity of waste to grow as well (such as lavish CEO Packages). BUt that does not have anything to do with a minimum wage. If we are right and a higher minimum wage makes the poor poorer, then who cares if CEO salaries have gone up? A higher minimum wage will hurt the poor, so stop it! Do why I and everyone else is advocation: raise taxes on non-poor (which includes CEOs) and use the money to pay a higher EITC.
2/12/2007 3:16:41 PM
CEO salaries have also gone up because of globalization. They get paid because their job is very important and not just anyone can do it.Also worker wages have been growing slower because of expanding healthcare costs.Our healthcare system is set up to make doctors and pharmaceuticals rich while the typical worker seeks too much care and therefore everyone suffers with high premiums.If we reformed healthcare then worker wages would skyrocket.
2/12/2007 9:36:41 PM
exorbitant CEO pay is bad for society. It increases the divide between rich and poor, which no one will argue is a good thing.
2/12/2007 9:42:33 PM