I don't understand why anyone would prefer expended government aid to the most obvious and most direct solution of increasing the wages of the poor. Increased government aid has the following problems associated with it.
You are subsidizing low wages. The easiest way of getting more of something is to subsidize it with more government aid. We don't want more low wages jobs, we want fewer of them.
Of course, Warren Buffet wants the government to subsidize wages. Higher wages means lower profits. The government subsidizing lower wages, resulting in more lower wage jobs and in higher profits. At the cost of whoever is taxed to provide the government aid. Is he proposing to tax corporate taxes to pay for the increased government aid.
Products made with the lower wage workers whose wages are subsidized with government aid will have an advantage in the market over products made with higher, unsubsidized wages. This also will increase the number of workers whose wages are subsidized.
Government aid to individuals is always going to be subjected to demonization, unlike government subsidies to corporations. People are going to attack any government aid to individuals as welfare. Look at the barrage of abuse leveled recently at food stamps, the SNAP program.
All very good points. The problem that I see is that in the not to distant future there will simply not be very many jobs left. There is very little a computer and robot can't accomplish. People bitch about Walmart and shitty wages, but look at Amazon, they just automate everything. Have you seen the Kiva robots that run their warehouse? I'll find a video if you haven't. It's just a matter of time before Walmart says "fuck these employees" and boom goes the biggest employer in the US. No way in hell are all these people going to be retrained as "knowledge workers" because I guarantee an algo will take 99% of those jobs as well.
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People thought the last great automation revolution would create tens of millions of unemployed without jobs and the hope of jobs. This was the mechanization of agriculture that saw the number of people employed on the farms reduced from 90% of the workers to less than 3% in about sixty years.
50% of the jobs that people do today didn't exist fifty years ago. It is estimated that it will only take twenty five years for us to reach the same point in the future where 50% of the jobs didn't exist today.
And we will work shorter workweeks and fewer days in the year. And in twenty five years we will be nearing the peak population in the world, the developed world will be riding the back of the curve, declining population,
But automation is a false argument when you are talking about the lower paid jobs. Automation is going to impact these jobs last. The payoff is less.
There is no reason to not just raise the wages of the poor. It's only going to reduce the profits of the companies, if done slowly enough. (no dismal we can't just raise the minimum wage to a hundred dollars an hour.)
We have if anything too much profits being collected by the investor class, this is why we have so many asset bubbles being built why so much of our profits go overseas to boost those economies, usually so that they can compete with our industries and our workers. Profits are intended to be money that is available for investing back into the economy, to build new and better production facilities. For most of the recent past the profits from American businesses have averaged three to four times the amount of business investment. This is a ridiculous and unnecessary amount of profit.
Of course, the wealthy want us subsidize low wages with government aid. It seems to address the problem with the least impact on profits, the income of the wealthy. But as I said in the long run it will only guarantee us more lower wage jobs.