Obviously not. It's obviously someone's efforts and/or what he gave up in order to do the work that can cause him economic pain. Paying somebody relieves his economic pain. (Sorry to be pedantic, but you have a history of slipping fallacies in when you speak loosely.)Obviously, paying someone can cause them economic pain if the payment does not fully compensate them for their efforts and/or what they gave up in order to do the work.
Why would I take his word for that any more than your word? If you had gay sex with your neighbor, and a Katrina survivor experienced pain, would you take the survivor's word for it that your gay sex caused Hurricane Katrina? If I pay somebody $14 and he experiences pain, I'll certainly take his word that he's in pain; but his privileged perception of his own pain gives him no privileged insight into the cause and effect structure of the universe. Whoever claims X causes Y has burden of proof.I would expect you to take his word for it.If I pay somebody $14 and he experiences pain, am I supposed to just take your word for it that my act caused his pain?
I was kind of hoping you'd accept it because it's sensible. But we can argue the point if you prefer.Furthermore, you are using a double standard, you expect me to accept your word that a measurement of harm must be made in comparison to doing nothing.
It appears then that the root of our disagreement is over whether zero action is as arbitrary an origin for the harm axis as shooting someone in the head is. So what exactly are you arguing for? Are you arguingNo, I am not using different reasoning. In both cases, there is a comparison with an alternative outcome. We simply disagree on that standard for the comparison.The criterion I exhibited is to compare something with doing nothing. When the criterion you use is to compare something with shooting someone in the head, you're applying different reasoning.
You made it relevant. You attempted to refute me with a reductio ad absurdum argument, relying on the assumption that it's absurd for someone being paid $0 not to be hurting him. So I exhibited a counterexample to your assumption, thereby demonstrating that there's nothing absurd about paying someone $0 not hurting him.If he didn't offer to pay you, then there were no wages. But what stretch of imagination is your example relevant?People volunteer to work for $0 all the time. I cleaned out my invalid father-in-law's rain gutters. He didn't offer to pay me; I didn't ask him to. By what stretch of the imagination do you figure he hurt me?By that reasoning, a person is better off if you pay him nothing rather than paying him with a bullet to the head, therefore being paid $0 isn't hurting him.
Speaking of things like food stamps and other programs, here is an article and after government transfers the poor are at some of their highest levels of after tax, after program incomes.
http://www.aei.org/publication/have-us-living-standards-gone-nowhere-since-1999-does-that-really-seem-right/?utm_source=paramount&utm_medium=email&utm_content=AEITODAY&utm_campaign=091815
We also need to realize that the last 20 or 30 years has made it very hard to actually compare to different generations.
Arkik, are you saying those figures are just plucked out of thin air by the right?
Arkik, are you saying those figures are just plucked out of thin air by the right?
A good think tank very carefully considers just which statistics displayed in just which order will serve their purposes. They assign the parameters and meaning to those parameters and produce charts that are accurate in that they meet the specified criteria of their makers. If a racial minority is discriminated against regularly, it becomes easy to chart their low income. Any moron ought to be able to see that...but to AI the low income is not a product of discrimination but one of the laziness of a certain color of people in our society. It is really awfully simple. The condemn a fraction of society on the basis of it having already been condemned. Come down off your high horse.
Wars on concepts are fucking stupid no matter how well intentioned.
Let's not have a war on anything - lets just give money to poor people, so they are not poor anymore.
Yes. And also no more than n.Exactly. You need no fewer than n employees to maximise profit.
I don't understand your explanation for why you disagree -- what I'm saying doesn't conflict with what you're saying. The price isn't a fixed boundary condition; it's something you set at whatever level maximizes your profit; i.e., if you lower the price you can sell more burgers but you'll make less money per burger. It does you no good to make more burgers than people will buy, so as you keep adding employees you'll have to keep reducing prices to make demand go up enough to consume your increased supply. When you get to the point that adding employees no longer adds more income than the going rate for labor you stop adding employees; which is to say, that's what determines n.Opinion noted but I've just said why I disagree.Well, it's an irrelevant abstraction if you aren't trying to maximize your profit.The demand is determined by burger price offset against local wage levels, the going rate for employees is determined by the labour market, and the marginal value of the last employee I need is an irrelevant abstraction.
The comment I'm addressing is l.d.'s claim, "Paying someone less than $15 may cause them economic or physical pain.". I didn't see a physical mechanism connecting his asserted cause to his asserted effect; I took you to be attempting to remedy this deficiency in his argument, by proposing that it's not the act of paying $9 but the rule that we're allowed to trade for $9 that causes the pain. So I was challenging the physicality of that proposed cause too. If that's not the rule you had in mind, sorry to misunderstand. What rule are you suggesting is harming the tired guy?And I can't see what this has to do with the comment you're ostensibly addressing, which makes no such claim.... But I can't see how you and another guy both hiring me for $9 apiece, which you do because I'm willing to do two jobs, which I need because nobody's income will go up $15 as a result of hiring me so nobody has a reason to hire me for $15, could plausibly be the cause of nobody's income going up $15 as a result of hiring me.More like : I'm paid so little I need two jobs, don't get home in time to help my kid with her homework and am tired and irritable in what little time I have with her mom/dad. You're not harming me so much as the rules we're playing by are.
If you're trying to convince me employers simply pay as little as the rules allow them to, good luck with that. I already know for a fact that it isn't true, since the rules where I live allow employers to pay $9/hour and my employer pays me more than that. If you have a theory of pay that's wildly different from the marginalist theory, one that "employers simply pay as little as the rules allow them to" is an apt if inaccurate metaphor for, can you explain it without the metaphor?Not if marginalism is an ideologically motivated crock ...and employers simply pay as little as the rules allow them to - i.e what's under dispute here.The underlying reason for my tiredness/irritability/homework problem is my not knowing how to make other people's income go up $15. The legality of hiring me for $9 didn't make me not know that. Banning people from hiring me for less than $15 won't fix that. Since I can't increase anybody's income $15, all it will do is make sure that anybody who hires me would lose money on the deal. So they won't hire me. That would be a rule we could play by that would hurt me.
Sorry, I'm not seeing how playing to those rules would be mutually beneficial. It looks to me like every one of those rules has winners and losers. That we would have no trouble coming up with potential rules that would "rob Peter to pay Paul" isn't a news flash.Higher MW, stronger employee protections, collective bargaining, shorter work hours, generous enough welfare that unemployment isn't a disaster for a family, big powerful unions represented, by law, on firms' boards.No doubt. By all means, identify some rules from another economy that would be mutually beneficial for us to adopt and let's talk about passing them.Other economies play by different rules to mutual benefit.
I'm not sure what you're getting at here. If you only mean there are other expenses besides labor, I was subtracting those from revenue to get what I was calling "income" -- i.e., I was speaking loosely in order to not get bogged down in detail. Sorry if that was confusing.Well no, revenue would have to increase by more than $12 for the employer to profit.Let's say the market rate for some work you know how to do is $12. That happens because at the current level of production of the good in question, adding a worker to a typical factory will increase production enough to increase income by $12.
Yes, and Rutherford said it was "moonshine" to think energy could be extracted from atomic nuclei. No doubt your prominent industrialist grew up being taught the classical economics that was conventional wisdom in the late 1800s; and no doubt when Adam Smith et al. were inventing classical economics in the late 1700s, there were prominent industrialists who thought that was the product of the itching imaginations of uninformed and inexperienced armchair theorizers, because it conflicted with the mercantilism they'd grown up being exposed to.Nah, you're assuming what I'm disputing. It just doesn't work like that in any firm I've seen, and I used to draw up manning schedules for some big contracts. Marginalism at firm level is - as a prominent industrialist described it when first expounded - "the product of the itching imaginations of uninformed and inexperienced armchair theorizers."But one employer calculates that at her factory income will increase $13 -- she's operating at too small a scale so the returns on adding employees have not yet diminished to $12 for her, as they have for her competitors.
But in the scenario, the market price for that sort of work is $12. (And yes, in the real world there are jobs that pay $12.) If you think that she'd offer slightly above $9 in the real world, would you take that job when others are paying $12? If you would -- which is to say, if it's feasible in the real world to offer slightly more than $9 for that sort of work and have people take you up on it -- then why is the market price $12? The rule only says you have to pay at least $9. What's your theory for why all the hiring managers paying $12 for that sort of work haven't been replaced?Her preference isn't stated in that anodyne little homily, so who knows? In the real world she'd offer slightly above $9 in order to maximise profits or she'd be replaced by someone who would. Unless, of course, there were rules mandating more equitable mutually beneficial deals.So she offers you a $12/hour job. Dissatisfied with your current $9/hour job, you take her up on the deal. Your income goes up $3; hers goes up 1$. Your current employer goes off and hires an unemployed person who knows how to do your old $9 job but doesn't know how to do your new $12 job, which means he's less likely to quit his new $9 job than you were. Win-win-win-win.
So what is this advantage your new employer has over you, that she prefers, that you are being harmed by her preference for?
Idealistic!
A good think tank very carefully considers just which statistics displayed in just which order will serve their purposes. They assign the parameters and meaning to those parameters and produce charts that are accurate in that they meet the specified criteria of their makers. If a racial minority is discriminated against regularly, it becomes easy to chart their low income. Any moron ought to be able to see that...but to AI the low income is not a product of discrimination but one of the laziness of a certain color of people in our society. It is really awfully simple. The condemn a fraction of society on the basis of it having already been condemned. Come down off your high horse.
Actually the irony is that it's a right wing tank saying that the left wing programs work. Or else we have to saw that the war on poverty that we've fought for 40 is a waste and needs to be abandoned.
There are many, in fact perhaps the majority who are poor through no fault of their own. In saying that, there are also many who just won't get off their arses to help themselves. You can lead a camel to water, but you can't make it drink.
Exactly. To maximise profit, you need no fewer than n workers and you don't hire more just because they're cheap. It is not the case, as you claimed in the post with which I took issue, that revenue diminishes per each successive hire from the first. Rather, revenue is uniform or increasing up to an optimum - n - determined by consumer demand for the product of labour.Yes. And also no more than n.CDJ said:Exactly. You need no fewer than n employees to maximise profit.
I don't disagree because that is NOT a determination of labour price by diminishing marginal utility of successive hires. It's a determination of some firm's optimum labour requirement by consumer demand (which Marx would have agreed with). It doesn't disagree with what I said, it disagrees with what you said.I don't understand your explanation for why you disagree -- what I'm saying doesn't conflict with what you're saying. The price isn't a fixed boundary condition; it's something you set at whatever level maximizes your profit; i.e., if you lower the price you can sell more burgers but you'll make less money per burger. It does you no good to make more burgers than people will buy, so as you keep adding employees you'll have to keep reducing prices to make demand go up enough to consume your increased supply. When you get to the point that adding employees no longer adds more income than the going rate for labor you stop adding employees; which is to say, that's what determines n.
What do you mean by "physical mechanism"? If you're claiming that harm can only be caused by immediate physical interaction, that's what's under dispute so it's pointless asking disputants to identify an immediate physical interaction.The comment I'm addressing is l.d.'s claim, "Paying someone less than $15 may cause them economic or physical pain.". I didn't see a physical mechanism connecting his asserted cause to his asserted effect; I took you to be attempting to remedy this deficiency in his argument, by proposing that it's not the act of paying $9 but the rule that we're allowed to trade for $9 that causes the pain. So I was challenging the physicality of that proposed cause too. If that's not the rule you had in mind, sorry to misunderstand. What rule are you suggesting is harming the tired guy?And I can't see what this has to do with the comment you're ostensibly addressing, which makes no such claim.... But I can't see how you and another guy both hiring me for $9 apiece, which you do because I'm willing to do two jobs, which I need because nobody's income will go up $15 as a result of hiring me so nobody has a reason to hire me for $15, could plausibly be the cause of nobody's income going up $15 as a result of hiring me.More like : I'm paid so little I need two jobs, don't get home in time to help my kid with her homework and am tired and irritable in what little time I have with her mom/dad. You're not harming me so much as the rules we're playing by are.
Not if marginalism is an ideologically motivated crock ...and employers simply pay as little as the rules allow them to - i.e what's under dispute here.The underlying reason for my tiredness/irritability/homework problem is my not knowing how to make other people's income go up $15. The legality of hiring me for $9 didn't make me not know that. Banning people from hiring me for less than $15 won't fix that. Since I can't increase anybody's income $15, all it will do is make sure that anybody who hires me would lose money on the deal. So they won't hire me. That would be a rule we could play by that would hurt me.
No metaphor. Employers pay as little as they can get away with in order to maximise profits. They don't pay you -Bomb#20- a statutory minimum because you're obviously a very smart guy who probably has scarce skills - i.e. they can't get away with it. If your labour generated $12 revenue but labour market conditions were such that others would do it for $9, a profit maximising firm would offer you about $9, not $12. Unless there were a statutory minimum above $9.If you're trying to convince me employers simply pay as little as the rules allow them to, good luck with that. I already know for a fact that it isn't true, since the rules where I live allow employers to pay $9/hour and my employer pays me more than that. If you have a theory of pay that's wildly different from the marginalist theory, one that "employers simply pay as little as the rules allow them to" is an apt if inaccurate metaphor for, can you explain it without the metaphor?
As for marginalism, I'm not sure what I've said in my arguments that rises to the level of an "ism". As far as I can see, my analysis relies only on the premise that employers are trying to maximize profit and the premise that there are diminishing returns from adding inputs to a production process. Do you reject either of those? It's not as though I've claimed people have quantifiable utility functions. What's your beef with marginalism, and what did I say that makes you think I'm relying on whatever aspect of marginalism you disagree with?
So do the alternatives. If rules which advantage Peter over Paul are nonetheless "mutually beneficial" since both Peter and Paul absolutely benefit, why aren't rules which advantage Paul rather than Peter?Sorry, I'm not seeing how playing to those rules would be mutually beneficial. It looks to me like every one of those rules has winners and losers. That we would have no trouble coming up with potential rules that would "rob Peter to pay Paul" isn't a news flash.Higher MW, stronger employee protections, collective bargaining, shorter work hours, generous enough welfare that unemployment isn't a disaster for a family, big powerful unions represented, by law, on firms' boards.No doubt. By all means, identify some rules from another economy that would be mutually beneficial for us to adopt and let's talk about passing them.Other economies play by different rules to mutual benefit.
Well I honestly think I said something pretty simple and you honestly lost me there. Could be my bad (and I do appreciate your thoughtful responses)..I'm not sure what you're getting at here. If you only mean there are other expenses besides labor, I was subtracting those from revenue to get what I was calling "income" -- i.e., I was speaking loosely in order to not get bogged down in detail. Sorry if that was confusing.Well no, revenue would have to increase by more than $12 for the employer to profit.Let's say the market rate for some work you know how to do is $12. That happens because at the current level of production of the good in question, adding a worker to a typical factory will increase production enough to increase income by $12.
If what you mean is that adding a worker increases income by, say, $13, and the $13 - $12 = $1 is where the profit comes from, you're failing to take into account the law of diminishing returns. The return from adding the workers the employer already hired, back when production was lower, was greater than $12 each; but it was diminishing toward $12 as more were added. If it were still $13 at the current level of production, why wouldn't the employer have hired another worker and gotten an extra $1? It's rational for the employer to stop hiring when she's hired so many workers that adding another one only increases income by $12.
No, it conflicted with the way he maximised profits from running factories.Yes, and Rutherford said it was "moonshine" to think energy could be extracted from atomic nuclei. No doubt your prominent industrialist grew up being taught the classical economics that was conventional wisdom in the late 1800s; and no doubt when Adam Smith et al. were inventing classical economics in the late 1700s, there were prominent industrialists who thought that was the product of the itching imaginations of uninformed and inexperienced armchair theorizers, because it conflicted with the mercantilism they'd grown up being exposed to.Nah, you're assuming what I'm disputing. It just doesn't work like that in any firm I've seen, and I used to draw up manning schedules for some big contracts. Marginalism at firm level is - as a prominent industrialist described it when first expounded - "the product of the itching imaginations of uninformed and inexperienced armchair theorizers."But one employer calculates that at her factory income will increase $13 -- she's operating at too small a scale so the returns on adding employees have not yet diminished to $12 for her, as they have for her competitors.
No one. You need no fewer than n wokers to deliver on time and don't hire extraneous labour just because it's cheap. You have to bid based on going rates for the kinds of labour you need, not price negotiable depending on the marginal revenue generated by each successive hire. It just doesn't and can't work like that.If it doesn't work that way in any firm you've seen, how did it work in the firms you drew up manning schedules for? Who decided how many people to man a contract with and what did they base their decisions on?
But the scenario is simply unrealistic. If people who "know how to do" work which generates $12 revenue already work for $9, profit maximising firms will offer them about $9, not $12.But in the scenario, the market price for that sort of work is $12. (And yes, in the real world there are jobs that pay $12.) If you think that she'd offer slightly above $9 in the real world, would you take that job when others are paying $12? If you would -- which is to say, if it's feasible in the real world to offer slightly more than $9 for that sort of work and have people take you up on it -- then why is the market price $12? The rule only says you have to pay at least $9. What's your theory for why all the hiring managers paying $12 for that sort of work haven't been replaced?Her preference isn't stated in that anodyne little homily, so who knows? In the real world she'd offer slightly above $9 in order to maximise profits or she'd be replaced by someone who would. Unless, of course, there were rules mandating more equitable mutually beneficial deals.So she offers you a $12/hour job. Dissatisfied with your current $9/hour job, you take her up on the deal. Your income goes up $3; hers goes up 1$. Your current employer goes off and hires an unemployed person who knows how to do your old $9 job but doesn't know how to do your new $12 job, which means he's less likely to quit his new $9 job than you were. Win-win-win-win.
So what is this advantage your new employer has over you, that she prefers, that you are being harmed by her preference for?
Exactly. To maximise profit, you need no fewer than n workers and you don't hire more just because they're cheap. It is not the case, as you claimed in the post with which I took issue, that revenue diminishes per each successive hire from the first. Rather, revenue is uniform or increasing up to an optimum - n - determined by consumer demand for the product of labour.Yes. And also no more than n.