Maybe Marx liked his Apple products and realize your claim was full of bunk seeing a premium is added to the price that has absolutely nothing to do with the cost of the product production.
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Which is a great idea. Use ridiculous hyperbole in order to make a reasonable idea (affordable wages that makes welfare less necessary, we are paying one way or the other) into a ridiculous idea that no one ever even came close to suggesting in the first place.
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Income inequality? Here is the rub for those panzy communistic liberals. The scabs on welfare have jobs that pay crap. If we don't allow that and force companies to pay more, costs on services and goods increases. That would be the worst thing that could ever happen!
Sure, instead of having a more livable wage, we have to help pay for their housing, health care, utility bills, food, college, etc... And in the process, working hard to strip them of dignity, by accusing them of being a race that hasn't held jobs for three or four generations and are simply the victims of themselves. And despite of all their alleged laziness, getting all this free stuff like cell phones and food and the best housing money can buy and cable and refrigerators.
Sure, stripping them of dignity and paying all that welfare is expensive and hard work relative to a more livable wage, but I don't want to spend $2 on a hamburger.
What do we want?
We want to pay the lowest possible price on goods and services!
Even if that means higher welfare costs on our tax bills?
We can hand wave that away by calling for welfare cuts because we can say people on welfare are lazy!
You want to clarify the point I bolded?
That people demonize what people receive on welfare, especially the working poor.
And you are making the bad assumption that creating the living wage won't hurt the people that need it. If raises costs to business have no impact, then we should have no problems raising the living wage to a million dollars.
That is ridiculous. We aren't talking about increasing wages to increase costs and there is no reason that increasing wages slowly over time would have any harmful effects to employment. What we are talking about is increasing wages and cutting profits, that is all. Increasing the amount of income that goes to the 99% by decreasing the amount of income that goes as profits to the 1%.
Profits and wages are both costs of production. We simply want more money to go to wages and less to go to profits. All of the inflation that we have had since 2009 has been due to increased profits.
Strawman. He's not saying the purpose of raising wages is to increase costs, but rather that the effect of raising wages is to increase costs.
And you're not going to accomplish your objective in most markets. When you shift money away from profits the field looks less inviting--more players leave, fewer enter. Eventually profits come back to the normal level. (And the reverse also happens--when a field has too much profit you get new players driving down the price. You can only sustain excess profit if you have a monopoly.)
Or they just raise the price of the service / product in order to adjust to the increase in Labor costs. You keep talking as if this isn't an option. If all low wage corps have to do this, the increase will be across the board.
How do you think that prices are set? If the producers could raise their prices after the wage increases why didn't they raise them before to make more profits? Were they being magnanimous toward their customers?
I will ask you the same question I asked Loren. (no fair comparing answers.) In 1970 the profit level in the whole economy was 5% of GDP. The latest level is 11%. The share of GDP that goes to wages has dropped by 6%. It looks to me as if profits have more than doubled by reducing wages.
In 1980 we instituted economic policies to do that very thing, to increase profits by suppressing wages. It seems to me that those policies worked, they increased profits and decreased wages. This isn't a very big leap in reasoning, is it?
But all of a sudden the very same people who told us in 1980 that these economic policies would do this, increase profits and decrease wages, have seemingly forgotten it now and are off for any other possible reasons that profits have increased by reducing wages.