Minimum wage is theory only, driven by pity toward workers (pandering to the majority of producers) and scapegoating employers.
There's no empirical evidence showing a net benefit to the whole economy.
Your only "fair trade" alternative is crybaby whining against the dirty capitalist pigs.
But some desperate job-seekers choose the low-paying sweatshop job as the best possibility. How do you know their choice is wrong? They have searched for the other possibilities and decided this was their best option. If there's really any number of better possibilities than this, then why are they choosing this one?
Is it because they don't know Donald bring-back-the-factories Trump is offering incredible good-paying jobs to everyone? with incredible benefits, incredible health-care and pension, etc.? Are those the "any number of possibilities" you say exist but those desperate job-seekers don't know about? You're really sure all those wonderful "jobs! jobs! jobs!" are there? only pleasant choices?
It is in the interest of destitute people to be taken advantage of in order for business to maximize profits?
Yes, IF it makes them less destitute than they would be otherwise, which it does. Why shouldn't the business make profit while making that worker and all the consumers better off? Why is it that you have no answer except your pure HATE for the business making profit? Why do you have to HATE that business, when it's doing nothing wrong other than making a profit?
Can't you come up with an example of something BAD that business is doing? to anyone? to that worker? to consumers? Why is it that you have only your HATE and nothing more? Why can't you suggest anything positive, to improve that worker's condition? You offer nothing for that worker by just whining that the employer could do more, and yet you offer no alternative to help that worker you pretend to feel sorry for.
Don't you realize that there are millions more poor people who are worse off than that low-paid worker? And your demand that he must either be paid at a higher rate or his job must be eliminated is going to make him worse off. If you really care about that poor low-paid worker, why don't you offer something which would IMPROVE his life rather than something that will make him and other workers WORSE off?
A wage race to the bottom is a benefit to people who have no negotiating power, so . . .
Yes it's a "benefit" if it makes them better off than if there was no job at all offered to them. If something makes you a little better off, then isn't it a benefit? or at worst you reject it as not enough and so you're no worse off -- what's wrong with that?
. . . have no negotiating power, so are to be considered fair game?
Considered BY WHOM to be "fair game"? they themselves are making the choice. They can turn down that job offer if it's not good enough. Why shouldn't they be free to make that choice? Hate language like "fair game" doesn't offer them anything better. Those hate words express nothing but your rage against the dirty capitalists, and nothing more. Is that all you have? only hate language? You can only condemn them without identifying what the harm is that they're doing? You can't say how they're making anyone worse off?
Your idea of a society or an economy is not something any reasonable person would want to see . . .
It's not just an IDEA, but it's the REALITY, that these choices are being made. Desperate job-seekers are in fact offered low-paying jobs and they choose them as their best option.
Why wouldn't a reasonable person want there to be such choices rather than no choice at all? What's "unreasonable" about choosing something that makes things a little better? A small improvement is not reasonable? It's better to have no improvement at all?
. . . something any reasonable person would want to see develop.
Reasonable people are against a small improvement developing? You mean NO IMPROVEMENT at all is more reasonable? Why is that reasonable? Why is NO IMPROVEMENT more reasonable than gradual improvement? You're saying a WORSE condition is more reasonable than a BETTER condition. And that if a small improvement is attempted, it should be stamped out in favor of NO IMPROVEMENT. Why do you want people to be worse off? Why do you want to thwart them from making some improvement? such as they get when they take that low-paying job rather than having no job at all? Why do you think no job at all is better for them when they want to have that choice instead of the no-choice-at-all which you want to impose on them?
The US is already too far down that road.
The US and other developed countries have come far down that road for generations, even centuries, and as a result offer much better choices to the poor today than were offered to them 100 and 200 years ago when they had their children working in the factories for 14 hours a day. By making those difficult choices back then, and others later, we have all benefited through these generations and today have developed to where the choices now are better. But you condemn those difficult choices, and so would have prevented them from making that gradual improvement, because slow improvement is worse than no improvement at all. You agree with the Luddites in preferring the no improvement at all. You condemn those gradual improvements and progress (which eliminated jobs and made some workers worse off in the short term) as something no "reasonable person would want to see develop."
What is not "reasonable" about having gradual progress? down the road toward gradual improvement? as an alternative to no improvement?
Gradual improvement in wages rate is not in the interest of business.
It is when they need the workers and qualified ones are in short supply, or some of them are quitting and are difficult to replace.
Some wages do increase, even if most do not. When there's the need for them to increase, to get the labor needed, those employers do increase the wages (for those workers needed).
There's nothing logically necessary about all wages continually increasing, all the time, for all categories. Some workers lose value, as the demand for them decreases. Why shouldn't the wage decrease in the case of those workers who become less valuable? If the need for those particular workers decreases, why isn't it appropriate for their wage to decrease?
There has been wage stagnation for decades. The aim is to hold wage cost down in order to boost profits.
Not always. Sometimes the wage is increased in order to boost profits, but other times held down in order to boost profits.
The aim in all cases is to boost profits, so that when higher wages are needed to attract needed workers (and thus boost profits), then the company increases wages in order to attract the needed workers and thus improve the production and make more profit.
It's not true that higher profit always requires lowering the wages, or that higher wages always has to mean lower profit. The company is entitled to do whatever increases the profit, and this can mean sometimes to reduce wages, but also sometimes to keep the wages at the same level, and also at times to increase the wages because of the need for additional workers.
It is the extreme of Crybaby Economics to insist that higher profit always means lower wages, and higher wages always has to mean lower profit. GROW UP!!!! Take Economics 1A. Get off this constant whining! whining! whining! The company is there to make a profit serving consumers, not to provide jobs and incomes to crybabies. It uses the workers as an instrument, as needed, to serve consumers, paying them only according to its function to serve consumers, not according to the workers' need for a job or for income.
Once again, exploiting workers benefits the rich at the expense of the economy at large and the workers.
No, it benefits EMPLOYERS, rich and poor, competing to keep down their costs.
The "exploitation" (competition and cost-saving) benefits all consumers who buy the company's product, because the lower production cost translates into lower prices = lower cost of living = higher living standard.
The competition and lower production cost has a legitimate role in the economy. Just take Economics 1A. It's very clear that
competition is always good for the economy, all competition, including competition between workers (wage competition). There are no producers who should not compete for the benefit of all consumers.
The reasons have been given numerous times.
The reasons companies try to save on labor cost (and other costs) is that this enables them to produce more and keep down their prices = good for consumers. It's OK for companies to profit as long as they serve consumers in the process, which always happens as a result of cost savings.
It is blatant exploitation that . . .
Calling it a name like "exploitation" doesn't change the fact that it's good for the economy, for consumers, by keeping down the prices. It's blatant profit-making and blatant serving consumers, which is what all producers/workers are supposed to do. The company is entitled to its reward for serving the interests of consumers, which is its obligation, not serving the workers.
. . . exploitation that takes advantage of the power imbalance between business and workers.
There's nothing wrong with using one's "power imbalance" over another. When you buy a product, you're often taking something which someone else also wants but cannot afford, so you're using your power imbalance over that other buyer who can't afford it. As long as there is wealth inequality, those who have more take advantage of that extra power. Everyone does it, including a poor person who has more than another poor person.
We're all better off that those who have more are able to use that "power imbalance" to hire someone. The one hired is never made worse off by it, as long as they're not coerced by a threat of violence from the employer. You can't name any case where it's wrong for someone to use their "power imbalance" to hire another at a competitive price, or choose the seller/worker who offers the same service at a lower price.
What's obscene about people being made better off? which is what happens when the poor person freely chooses to work for a rich person?
It's to the benefit of everyone for the rich and poor to do transactions. You can't name one case, not even a hypothetical case, where it's wrong for the rich person to hire the poor one at a competitive price. As long as the one hired is free to say no without any retaliation from the employer.
All Crybaby Economics 1A.
Workers who are more competitive, more valuable, do get wage increases. But with automation and cheap labor, the value of the average wage-earner is stagnating. That's true. It's the marketplace. Everyone is better off letting the market supply-and-demand set the wages and prices, even though the less competitive don't do as well. Yet virtually all workers are better off if we let the market set the wages and prices rather than have outsiders interfere by imposing anything onto the buyers/employers and sellers/workers.
Whatever might be wrong in the economy, hurting many/most at the middle and lower levels, employer-bashing such as imposing higher wages is no solution. Many of those suffering bad times are themselves employers or independent contractors who would be made worse off by scapegoating all employers or all non-wage-earners.
''That’s because employers have, over decades, built a political apparatus to hold down pay.
No, this is just more Crybaby Economics. The only "apparatus" is the marketplace, in which some workers are less competitive than others, and this is what holds down their wage level. But if there are laws imposing wage limits, that violates the market supply-and-demand and is contrary to free trade, which requires all players to be free to make their choices with no outside interference to set their price/wage.
When unemployment goes down, wages are supposed to go up. That’s just supply and demand. Quite puzzlingly, though, this mechanism seems not to be working today.
This is just crybaby whining. Wages and prices do follow supply-and-demand, but many sellers tend to be impatient and whine that the wages/prices don't keep up. These are usually the less competitive sellers who think their price has to go up automatically without them having to do anything. If they just play the victim passively and expect the good economy to automatically sweep them upward, they're likely to be disappointed. The market still requires them to earn it, not just sit passively and enjoy the increasing economic growth numbers.
Unemployment stands at a modest 4%, but paychecks aren’t growing.
Which paychecks? Some are growing. Nothing says ALL paychecks must automatically grow just because there are some good economic numbers. Stop the whining and get to work to earn your higher income, if you really deserve it. You still have to deserve it, and earn it. It's not an automatic entitlement to every crybaby wage-earner.
Although today’s is the best-educated workforce in history, employers . . .
It's not evident that today's "workforce" is the best-educated ever. What we call "education" today no longer has the value it did 50 years ago. By any objective standard, such as can be measured by testing, the workforce, or the population available to be hired today, is probably less educated, less intelligent, less able to solve problems, less resourceful, less knowledgeable, than it was 50 years ago, or 100 years ago. However, those who are more valuable, smarter and more educated, etc., are paid more. It's just that this is a smaller percentage of the total available workforce today.
There probably is something wrong, causing work and business to not function as well today, and making "the American Dream" (or "the British Dream" or "the Australian Dream" etc.) to fall short of expectation. We should look for a possible explanation. But just crybaby whining that employers don't pay enough doesn't explain anything.
Although today’s is the best-educated workforce in history, employers just insist that workers need more training.
They are more easily replaceable, with increased automation and increased cheap foreign labor. So more specialization would help to increase their value. But also, often the employers are inundated with too many applicants, and they just say anything to get rid of half of them, because they need some artificial screening device to wack off a large number of them. And "not experienced enough" or "not enough training" is a simple cliché used to quickly reduce the number arbitrarily.
In other words, they’re gaslighting us.
Yes. If they were honest, they'd just say, "You're simply not worth paying the $15/hour plus benefits I'd have to pay you. I'm not here to provide charity -- sorry. I already have too many charity cases working here -- I can't afford any more. Or rather, I've hired my quote of charity workers, and I'm too selfish to keep hiring more of you. Go to some other company for your charity job. I've already hired my quota." Maybe this is what they should say, instead of lying and saying it's "lack of training" or "lack of experience" and other excuses. But then again, if they told the truth, they'd be accused of selfishness and have to put up with more preaching from ideologues who want to make them feel guilty.
Meanwhile, over decades, employers have built and maintained a massive collective political apparatus to hold down wages. To call it a conspiracy would be only slight embellishment.
It's childish paranoia. There's no evidence of any "apparatus" to hold down wages, other than the market supply-and-demand.
The symptoms of the problem are not hard to miss. In February, for example, the American economy posted its biggest one-month jobs gain in a couple years, but wage growth stayed stalled out.
There are many factors. And it's not true that there was no wage growth at all. Some jobs increased in value while others decreased due to more automation and more cheap labor. And there's also a lag, as employers will not increase wages until they really experience the shortage of labor and need more help. They also impose extra demands on their existing workers, increasing their hours, trying to meet the demand with as little cost increase as possible. Hiring new workers is costly at first, due to new paperwork, insurance, labor laws which impose more costs -- so they put it off as long as possible.
But workers of higher value do gain from the improved numbers. Those with higher value, a minority, are the first to experience the benefit of an upswing in the employment numbers.
For months, economists and financial journalists have been puzzling over the question, as Bloomberg put it, of “why the economy grows but your paycheck doesn’t”.
Not just for months, but years, decades. This is a very gradual trend, not something sudden, and it's a pattern emerging generations ago. It's partly the increase in automation, but also globalism and immigration and cheaper labor. There's nothing wrong with any of this. All the increased trade and commerce and mobility causes an increase in the total competition, and this makes it appear like something new and threatening is happening, but the truth is that the standard of living is increasing as a result. It's just that the competition has become tougher, so that many are frightened by it, as producers/workers. And also, there may be something that causes the increasing inequality, so that the rich benefit from it more than the middle- and lower-class levels.
In any case, artificially propping up the wage level is no solution to anything.
Economists will tell you that wages generally increase with productivity – that you’re paid in line with the value of what you do.
This is mostly fiction as it relates to wage-earners. The truth is that it's not the wage-earners who have increased in value. Rather, it's new technology which causes the higher productivity, not the work done by wage-earners. Those factory workers are doing nothing more valuable, even though the output has increased in value. The workers are still pushing the buttons and switches, as always. The few who are more skilled are paid for it, so that their higher value is rewarded. But most of the wage-earners have not increased in value. It's only a minority who are more valuable, and those ones are being rewarded for their higher value, as the market always pays higher for those who are more competitive.
And the competition has become tougher, even for some of the skilled workers.
This was credible from the end of the second world war to the 1970s, when productivity and hourly wages rose almost perfectly in sync.
Perhaps -- you can crank out lots of numbers to prove whatever you want. But there's nothing which dictates that wage-earner value increases equally with new technology. That worker is not more valuable just because some engineers designed a better machine for him to operate. Labor unions were stronger back then and were able to force companies to "share" the profits of higher production with the workers, even though the workers were not the ones causing the higher productivity. This "sharing" did not last, as it was obvious that the company was experiencing improved production not due to the wage-earners, but rather to new technology produced by scientists and engineers, who are the real creators of the new value.
So the "sharing" the profits with wage-earners was not permanent. The market is not stagnant in preserving something which inefficiently distributes the earnings. It's better to direct the proceeds/investments into whatever is more productive.
But according to research by the Economic Policy Institute, from the early 1970s to 2016 productivity went up 73.7%, and wages only 12.3%.
Those workers are very well paid compared to the poor making only $20,000 per year, or even less. And yet these very low-paid workers are probably just as valuable as those higher-paid workers whose wages went up 12.3%. And most of the higher-paid workers (whose wage went up "only" 12.3%) are more easily replaceable by cheap labor. The truth is that their value is decreasing as a percent of the total economy, and will probably continue to decrease -- regardless of the new technology or new machines they operate which they did not produce but were built by scientists and engineers, who are very well paid for their higher value.
Did you even bother to read this article? It gives as much evidence AGAINST minimum wage as in favor of it. It is slightly slanted toward giving minimum wage the benefit of the doubt, if it's set reasonably low, because of negative effects on employment and undue burden on some businesses.
And there's no clear evidence that minimum wage does produce the intended benefits. There's only one case where we have clear evidence -- proof -- of the effect of minimum wage, which is that of Samoa where Washington tried to impose the federal minimum wage, and it had to be rescinded later when the increased minimum wage ended up doing more harm than good. In this one case we know for sure that MW did harm, not benefit.
In 2007, Congress passed legislation to raise the territory's minimum wages, but subsequent legislation delayed or reduced these increases. The current schedule would raise all of the territory's minimum wages to the current federal level by 2036—although any increase to the federal minimum wage will delay this schedule.
https://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-17-83
This case shows clearly that the MW increase did more harm than good, so that even those who originally favored it had to reverse themselves after the results were clear.
By May 2009 the third scheduled minimum wage increase in Samoa took effect, rising to $4.76 an hour and covering 69 percent of canning workers. This did not increase purchasing power, stimulate demand, and raise living standards, as many minimum wage proponents theorize. Instead StarKist-one of the two canneries then located in Samoa-laid off workers, cut hours and benefits, and froze hiring. The other cannery-Chicken of the Sea-shut down entirely in September 2009.
The Government Accountability Office reports that between 2006 and 2009 overall employment in American Samoa fell 14 percent and inflation-adjusted wages fell 11 percent. Employment in the tuna canning industry fell 55 percent. The GAO attributed much of these economic losses to the minimum wage hike.
The Democratic Governor of American Samoa, Togiola Tulafona, harshly criticized this GAO report for understating the damage done by the minimum wage hike. Testifying before Congress Gov. Tulafona objected that "this GAO report does not adequately, succinctly or clearly convey the magnitude of the worsening economic disaster in American Samoa that has resulted primarily from the imposition of the 2007 US minimum wage mandate." Gov. Tulafona pointed out that American Samoa's unemployment rate jumped from 5 percent before the last minimum wage hike to over 35 percent in 2009. He begged Congress to stop increasing the islands' minimum wage:
"We are watching our economy burn down. We know what to do to stop it. We need to bring the aggressive wage costs decreed by the Federal Government under control. But we are ordered not to interfere ...Our job market is being torched. Our businesses are being depressed. Our hope for growth has been driven away...Our question is this: How much does our government expect us to suffer, until we have to stand up for our survival?"
Samoan employers responded to higher labor costs the way economic theory predicts: by hiring fewer workers. Congress hurt the very workers it intended to help. Fortunately, Congress heeded the Governor's plea and suspended the future scheduled minimum wage increases.
https://www.cashmerevalleyrecord.com/minimum-wage-disaster-american-samoa
Subsequently the minimum wage increase in Samoa has been delayed or reversed:
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/cong...ErvYnUIIC9ske3Krystx3YIRTnbF8q8HWJvHkpy1yiUgA
It's clear from these reports on the Samoa MW increases, that everyone agrees that the increase was too much and has to be rescinded. And yet many still favor MW in Samoa and want to make it equal to that in the 50 states. But this continually gets delayed, because everyone knows of the damage when companies have to cut back or shut down. So now they're thinking maybe Samoa will finally have the same MW as the U.S. by 2036, way off in the future. Everyone agrees on putting it off, delaying it, but also ideally they favor the MW idea, as a theory. But in actual practice, so far, it's not working.
Congress OKs American Samoa minimum wage freeze
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
JULY 19, 2012 1:35 PM
PAGO PAGO, American Samoa — Congress passed a bill this week to freeze American Samoa’s minimum wage, responding to employer concerns and a government financial report that suggest automatic increases were harming the U.S. territory’s economy.
American Samoa’s minimum pay was set to increase by 50 cents in September, but that now stands to be delayed until 2015.
Minimum wage in American Samoa varies from $4.18 to $5.59 per hour, depending on the industry. The lowest wage is for garment workers and the highest is for those in the shipping industry. Tuna canneries make up the largest private employer, where the rate is $4.76.
The Fair Minimum Wage Act of 2007 provided for annual 50-cents per hour increases until the rate matched the rest of the U.S., where the minimum pay is $7.25 per hour.
Increases for 2010 and 2011 were previously delayed by another federal law. The last increase went into effect in 2009, the day after a tsunami killed 34 people in the territory and the same day a tuna cannery shut down.
The issue of pay has been the focus of an ongoing debate in the territory where a communal land system allows many people to live rent-free with their families. A majority of American Samoa land is communally owned by families. But everyday household items need to be shipped to the island, making them much more expensive than in most parts of the U.S.
A report last year by the U.S. Government Accountability Office said employment in American Samoa has declined because of the minimum wage increases that began in 2007. The 142-page report said the decrease in employment was a result of losing a tuna cannery in American Samoa. Employers blamed the minimum wage increase for layoffs, work hour reductions and hiring freezes.
America Samoa’s nonvoting delegate in the U.S. House of Representatives, Eni H. Faleomavaega, said the Senate bill was overwhelmingly approved Tuesday, 378-11.
While he supported it, “I take no happiness in the successful passage of this bill because I still stand for fair wages for American Samoa’s workers,” he said. “So between now and 2015, it will be up to the American Samoa government and our corporate partners, including StarKist and Tri-Marine, to find new ways of succeeding without further compromising the wages of our fish cleaners because I cannot promise that I will support any more delays after this.”
The measure now goes to the president, who is expected to sign it.
Three years ago, StarKist Co. announced the reduction of some 800 positions at StarKist Samoa, citing a competitive industry and higher labor costs. Spokeswoman Mary Sestric said the company is hopeful Congress will again delay the next scheduled increase.
StarKist workers on a morning shift Wednesday declined to comment on the delay.
American Samoa Gov. Togiola Tulafono has said the 2009 cannery closure led to unemployment reaching nearly 20 percent by 2010.
“Congress is to be thanked for preventing further economic calamity in American Samoa and preventing continual increases to the minimum wage which would have led to additional layoffs in our fragile economy,” said local Chamber of Commerce Chairman David Robinson.
It's not that the above parties are against MW -- making Samoa the same as the 50 states. They favor it, but for Samoa they know it has to be delayed, again and again, because the facts show that it doesn't work. Not yet. The hope is that ideally some day maybe it's possible.
So there's clear evidence that it failed in Samoa, at the level of increase everyone originally favored, based on the theory that it would increase the consumer spending power and boost the economy. The facts proved otherwise. This is not just another MW "study" theorizing that it might work. This is a proven case where MW increase failed, as recognized by everyone, not just MW-debunkers.
By contrast, there has been no clear case showing that the MW ever did more benefit than harm. In all the "studies" promoting the MW there is no evidence that it produces the net benefits intended. It obviously benefits certain workers whose incomes increase, but there is no measure of the negative results -- higher prices and higher unemployment numbers. These usually cannot be measured and are assumed to be small enough, but there is no way to determine whether the harm is greater or less than the benefits.
''Without a wage floor, employers would continue to pay less and less, destroying the purchasing power of the consumers who would make less money, Cooper said. The minimum wage then helps mitigate that imbalance of power between employers and low-wage workers.''
This only presents the rationale for minimum wage, without the author of the article agreeing with it. This only expresses the INTENT behind MW but not any argument that the intended results are achieved by it.
There are some references to economists like Krueger who says MW doesn't likely do harm to the employment numbers, but this is only so if the MW is kept low enough, below some threshold, and no one ever has explained what that threshold is, or given any evidence that a low-enough threshold has no negative effect. Rather, the only data on this is that the MW, as long as it's low enough, does only small damage to employment, hopefully none, but no study has ever shown that it does no damage at all. It's just that the damage is too small to measure.