Implict here is that an increase in the minimum wage will result in increased prices. They don't explain how that would be true.
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. Customers will purchase less from firms that hire minimum wage labor. Therefore, you see a reduction in employment for minimum wage labor. You will also see the remaining firms attempt to find substitutes for minimum labor - either use less of it and provide slightly worse service (a reduction in product quality with no offsetting reduction in price, the other form a price increase can take), or more automation.
By declaring my explanation a mess you apparently feel relieved of any need to address the various points in it? Perhaps your simplistic understanding of economics renders you incapable of addressing them? We will never know, apparently. I certainly can discuss your explanation of how an increase in wages results in higher prices.
You at least seem to agree with me that the Austrian economics and Econ 101 explanation using marginal productivity isn't the answer. Is this true or are you just 'messing' with me?
On to your explanation. This is simply amazing. In one short post you tell us that the wage increase cuts profits but later in the post you say that increased wages increases prices. And that prices are set by producers to maximize profits but later in the post you say that supply and demand sets prices.
And you tell us that this dichotomy in prices, sometimes set by supply and demand, sometimes in the control of the producer, is intuitively obvious.
Matched only by the equally obvious wage costs increases that sometimes reduce profits until it doesn't and then it starts to increase prices.
Amazingly enough you are half right. How could you not be? You are firmly on the fence between two possible explanations!
Yes, the first and main effect of a wage increase is to reduce profits. This is what I have been saying consistently. This is what the macro data tells us, that any kind of wage increase affects the split of income between wages and profits.
This reduction in profits could force marginal businesses out of business as you say. But this would be a very rare occurrence. Why? Because we know that an operating business can continue to operate indefinitely even without profit as long as its revenues cover its costs.
And the business will continue to operate without profit because the worse thing for a capitalist isn't in not making a profit, it is losing most of their investment if the business goes under.
So yes, it is possible for a cost increase to drive a few businesses into bankruptcy, but only a very few, certainly not enough to make a difference in the whole economy. And certainly not a reason for a wage increase to result in higher prices.
But let's humor you and consider what happens when one of those those few businesses does go out of business. The business was selling product with the pre-wage increase cost structure. There was demand for the product at the price that they offered it at.
But because it was a modest increase affecting a few of their employees there were businesses that were making a profit and who will continue to make a profit even under the new cost structure with the increased wages. Since there was demand at the old price for product that the bankrupt business was meeting the more efficient, profitable business can increase their profits by meeting that demand by utilizing unused capacity in their existing facilities, or by buying the production facilities of the bankrupt company,* or by building new production facilities.
(I use to say that, for example, a business could add a night shift to increase production. But Loren pointed out that his company tried to do this but "it didn't turn out so well." Obviously if Loren's company can't make it work no one can.)
What you have pointed out leads us to some conclusions.
- Raise the minimum wage in small, gradual steps to minimize disruption and allow the economy to adapt.
- The best time to raise the minimum wage is when production capacity utilization is low, like now.
- You don't agree with the base assumption of the study that you referenced in the OP, the one that convinced you that the minimum wage isn't a very good way to eliminate poverty.
- This leads some of us to question your reasoning because it leads many of us to believe that you are more interested in a study's conclusions than the validity their method of reaching those conclusions.
- It is starting to dawn on you that in the modern economy most markets and most businesses don't compete on price.
- That businesses prefer to compete by being more productive, more efficient for one.
- Next you might even start to realize businesses don't have to mindlessly rely on the price as the single determining piece of information about whether to invest that the Austrians and Econ 101 claim that it is.
- That businesses now can compete with one another on a whole range of factors other than price; quality, features, sexual attraction bestowed by the use of the product, sophistication, innovation, obsolescence, by branding, by advertising, etc.
- From there you might even deduce that these things are as they are in the modern economy not because of government fiat but because over time and with the evolution the economy that these are the results of the free choices that have been collectively made by generations of business people when faced with the daily realities of the ever changing economy.
- Decisions made because the reality is that in the modern, industrial economy competition on price results in only one outcome, the elimination of profit.
- And you might even start to understand that the demand for the product and the effective demand in the entire economy is now more important than the questions of supply and over time they will become even more important than they are now.
- That human capital is now more important than financial capital, that supply no longer creates its own demand (if it ever did,) that the economy is now demand lead not supply limited as it was when it was an agricultural economy.
* I did this frequently for my company, I bought production facilities for 10¢ on the dollar of what a new installation would cost, usually with trained employees already hired and working.