Jimmy Higgins
Contributor
- Joined
- Jan 31, 2001
- Messages
- 50,637
- Basic Beliefs
- Calvinistic Atheist
So the argument seems to be that raising the minimum wage will destroy the American economy, as was seen with the other minimum wage hikes?
But are the points about those receiving the increase from the minimum wage hike not being that many in the last quintile still true? If so, fighting poverty via raising the minimum wage wouldn't be effective then and alternatives should be sought.I have access to the paper. It's not a study but a thought experiment and lit review to support a preconceived conclusion. There are no hard numbers only a lot of "shoulds" and "we thinks". I could do the same thing and "prove" the Koch Bros are Bolsheviks.
This is the norm for Austrian economics. They believe that thought experiments, a good way to describe what they term "praxeology," is a better way to think about economics than the hypothesis and test against known data cycle of science. Refer to nearly any page in von Mises' Human Action. It is available as a free download here.
So the argument seems to be that raising the minimum wage will destroy the American economy, as was seen with the other minimum wage hikes?
But are the points about those receiving the increase from the minimum wage hike not being that many in the last quintile still true? If so, fighting poverty via raising the minimum wage wouldn't be effective then and alternatives should be sought.This is the norm for Austrian economics. They believe that thought experiments, a good way to describe what they term "praxeology," is a better way to think about economics than the hypothesis and test against known data cycle of science. Refer to nearly any page in von Mises' Human Action. It is available as a free download here.
I'm an advocate and it's not what I've told you. Here's another for you : "Without a minimum wage, the bad employer undercuts the good, and the worst undercuts the bad." - Winston Churchill.
It isn't a fact that I think welfare is a dirty word, and disguising welfare in MW policy is precisely what I'm saying we shouldn't do.The fact that you think welfare is a dirty word, so we must do our best to disguise it in a minimum wage policy (instead of through an earned income credit for example), is not often a position I often hear.
What is the relevant difference to people's standard of living whether they are earning $10,000 wage income and $10,000 earned income credit ($20,000) vs. $20,000 wages (only obtainable with a minimum wage law)?
If, given the choice, do you think they would prefer $20,000 in wage income or $10,000 wage income and $15,000 earned income credit? The $15,000 earned income credit is actually more affordable for society compared to a minimum wage that gives people $20,000 in wages, if the earned income credit is focused on those below 2x the poverty line. These are the kind of trade-offs one must consider. When minimum wage advocates don't prioritize like this and consider the fact that we could increase incomes for those in poverty without a minimum wage far more with other alternatives, and they don't consider whether this is actually a better outcome for society, the minimum wage seems to be more about making themselves feel good rather than actually helping people.
Canard DuJour said:"Without a minimum wage, the bad employer undercuts the good, and the worst undercuts the bad." - Winston Churchill.
Without a minimum wage, market forces determine the wages. The statement is also demonstrably false: a "bad" employer who tries to pay below market wages will perform worse than the "good" employer who pays market wages.
That second assumption is awful.
So what does happen? You failed to answer last time I asked.
How much gets passed on? What happens to the rest?
So the argument seems to be that raising the minimum wage will destroy the American economy, as was seen with the other minimum wage hikes?
It seems to be the point that you are trying to make. Profits disappear, people become unemployed, Palin becomes President. Pretty much economic armageddon.You perfectly well know that's not what we are saying.So the argument seems to be that raising the minimum wage will destroy the American economy, as was seen with the other minimum wage hikes?
Actually, that'd be you. According to the 2000 paper, the cost for the poorest quintile for the year due to cost increases from the wage hike was $84 a year. So costs did go up, but not by much. And no notable link shows employment dropping noticeably due to a hike as well... mainly because fewer employees means less opportunity for more money.You're trying to avoid actually addressing the issue.
I'm not sure that really makes sense. The underlying demand is there, but suppressed by higher prices triggered by lack of competition. In other words, firms are reaping extra profit by raising prices. But a scenario where profits are high, competition is low, demand is captive, and there is a large pool of ready-trained employees, is ripe for new entrants into the market. It doesn't sound like a new equilibrium at all.
What I don't understand is that, in your analysis, you're portraying increased automation and the closure of loss-making companies as bad outcomes. Doesn't that actually improve the economy overall?
The reason automation can be good is that it can lower the cost of producing things allowing us to afford more things, and free up labor to produce those other things. For example, when you lower the cost of producing some good from $20 to $15 people can have more of that thing and/or more other things.
But when you start messing with prices all bets are off. For example if you apply a minimum wage that raises the cost of a good from $20 to $25 people can afford less of that thing and/or less of other things. Then there may be an automation solution that now makes sense because it can lower the cost to $22 but it is still higher than before and people can afford less things.
Also, the labor that is displaced by the automation struggles to find alternative uses because you have artificially raised the price of labor above what the market would pay for unskilled labor.
Prices contain information. When you mess with prices the economy rebalances into a less optimal allocation of resources.
Setting a price for any good is messing with prices. Why is labour different?
Setting a price for any good is messing with prices. Why is labour different?
Setting a price for any good is messing with prices. Why is labour different?
Silly Togo, because government is bad. Everyone knows this.
But it's patriotic to run around claiming the US government is our enemy and ruins everything it touches while intimating that we may have screwed up in Iraq makes you a socialist, islamofascist traitor.
Frankly your posts in this thread are examples of extremely poor economic reasoning and straw men, so it is no surprise that anyone does not know what you are trying to say.So the argument seems to be that raising the minimum wage will destroy the American economy, as was seen with the other minimum wage hikes?
You perfectly well know that's not what we are saying. You're trying to avoid actually addressing the issue.
Of course they can't. Unchanged demand means they'd lose sales and, therefore, profit.
Now it might be that the raised production cost makes the lower price unprofitable. Marginal businesses will have to up their prices or fold, and may fold anyway if there aren't consumers willing to pay the higher price. But that
(a) doesn't mean all MW raises are passed directly to consumers, and
(b) doesn't necessarily make consumers worse off. If the raise is around the point where employees need welfare and charity, others were already paying the difference for stuff they weren't willing to buy at its true cost.
Your whole analysis is a mess. However, this should be intuitively obvious.
Profitability of each firm falls along a normal curve. You have some losing money or breaking even, most of them making near the "average" profit, and some of them making well beyond the average.
Labor cost increases will push those firms at the left side of the curve, the least profitable firms, into being nonviable. They will shut down. The greater the increase the more that will shut down.
Now, with less competition out there, the profit maximizing price increases for the remaining players. Supply has been reduced (the ones that shut down), so the remaining suppliers can charge more to meet the unchanged demand.
Of course, when price increases, you also get less quantity demanded.
I'm not sure that really makes sense. The underlying demand is there, but suppressed by higher prices triggered by lack of competition. In other words, firms are reaping extra profit by raising prices. But a scenario where profits are high, competition is low, demand is captive, and there is a large pool of ready-trained employees, is ripe for new entrants into the market. It doesn't sound like a new equilibrium at all.
What I don't understand is that, in your analysis, you're portraying increased automation and the closure of loss-making companies as bad outcomes. Doesn't that actually improve the economy overall?
How much higher? The percent increase in production/service costs are not equal to the percent in wage increase.But, remember, the profit isn't extra because they are paying higher labor costs.I'm not sure that really makes sense. The underlying demand is there, but suppressed by higher prices triggered by lack of competition. In other words, firms are reaping extra profit by raising prices. But a scenario where profits are high, competition is low, demand is captive, and there is a large pool of ready-trained employees, is ripe for new entrants into the market. It doesn't sound like a new equilibrium at all.
Only in your post. How many corporations went under with each minimum wage hike? I'm certain the number must be huge if you are correct.What we are seeing is a return to a similar average profit, but with fewer firms left in the market.
Here is a little fact regarding mathematics for you. The cost of an employee goes beyond wages. It also can include health care, paid vacation, paid sick-time, etc...It's bad for the employees who are out a job or have had their hours reduced to part-time.What I don't understand is that, in your analysis, you're portraying increased automation and the closure of loss-making companies as bad outcomes. Doesn't that actually improve the economy overall?
That is only true if the reduction in hours ends up causing a reduction in compensation.It's bad for the employees who are out a job or have had their hours reduced to part-time.
Each company handles it differently. Some will be able to pass on all the added cost. Some will absorb a portion of the cost through lower profits. Some will change how they employ people.
Assuming all the added cost will be passed on is just overly simplistic and has no basis in reality. But I guess it's right at home in an economics model.
Actually economics says just what you just said. And then it adds thing like less profits means more marginal businesses close and fewer MW employing businesses open. And that higher prices for those products you raised the price of means less demand for them, and this means less profits still and fewer businesses that employ MW workers still. And all those things you euphemistically refer to as "how they employ people" cut in the direction of employing fewer MW people and perhaps thus reducing the quality of the service and experience for customers causing demand for these employers to fall further still.
So when you enter the economics zone it means MW workers get fewer jobs, fewer hours, and places that employ them will be more likely to shut down.
These are realities people in the ksen zone usually seem to deny.