If you "get" my point about the differences between capital investment and the use of capital services in the modern industrial and even post industrial economies it puts you ahead of about 90% of the economists working today.
This is one of the points involved in what is called the Cambridge Capital Controversy of the 1950's and 1960's. It was between the economists of Cambridge University in the UK and of the economists of MIT in Cambridge, Massachusetts, hence the term Cambridge Controversy. The economists of MIT finally conceded that the economists of Cambridge University were right and they spent the next sixty years ignoring the concession that the UK's economists were right. It is one of the major reasons that neoclassical economics is so nearly useless today, especially for predicting the course of the economy.
I am assuming that you can google the terms to see more about this.
I'm trying to understand how you are trying to apply it here. If people do think that increasing the minimum wage doesn't cause other problems, then why can't we raise the minimum wage to a million dollars an hour?
The main argument against raising the minimum wage is that it will cause unemployment. This argument is not based on examples from past history, none exist showing widespread unemployment from raising the minimum wage or any other wage for that matter.
The argument that raising wages will cause unemployment is based on theory alone. That a rise in wages will under certain conditions will cause the production costs to rise above the wages of the lowest paid workers and they will be laid off. The key phrase is "under certain conditions." Those conditions are that the economy is in equilibrium, it is at full employment and at full utilization of production capabilities. This is almost never the case, it only has occurred in all out wartime, like World War II.
Short form, the miracle of the self-regulating free market requires that the prices of goods or services be driven down to the marginal costs of production of the last product produced. Employment is based on the costs of the wages of the employee who produces the last product produced being lower than this price, if the wages are higher then he will be laid off. Ridiculous you say. I couldn't agree more, it is. But it is the only way that there can be a self-regulating free market.
However, it does allow economists to say that raising wages could result in unemployment "under certain conditions." They don't tell you that the certain conditions hardly every apply and that it is based on a completely bullsh*t theory. After a short time they drop the qualifier "under certain conditions." It is dishonest.
The reference to the capital controversy was perhaps a step too far. But it is a similar dishonesty of neoclassical economics, the free market economics. Neoclassical economists are desperate to establish that capital investment earns income. That capital investment is a scarce resource that is limited and that must be rewarded for its part in production. That capital in the form say of machinery used in production is the same to industrial production as land is to farming. But it is not the same. One example of why is the difference between the capital machine as a single resource to produce and that the increased frequency of the use of the machine can produce more. For example by running a night shift to operate the machine 16 hours a day instead of only eight hours a day, you have doubled the capacity of the machine and halved the "wage," profits, due to it in the terms of per unit produced. Industrial capital is not the same as land is to farming where you can't run a night shift to grow something else at night.
The theory that an increase in wages can cause unemployment is based on this idea of a fixed capital machine that we can't get anymore production out of. The whole theory is based on the work of the classical economists of the early 19th century. And they were concerned with agriculture, the industrial revolution hadn't happened yet.
Okay, I am sure that that is too much information. But to your challenge of why not raise the minimum wage to a million dollars?
Once again, I caution you that we are not just talking about the minimum wage. The neoclassical economic theory that increases in wages will cause unemployment "under certain conditions" applies to any increase in wages, including the CEOs. It is a part of the dishonesty that it is only trotted out when we talk about raising the minimum wage.
So your question should be why don't we raise all wages to a million dollars? Actually we could, if it was done slowly over time. But there is no reason to do it. Everything would have to adjust, prices, land values, profits, you would create massive amounts of inflation for no net gain. Finally we must establish a balance that keeps the economy growing at a reasonable rate and that keeps employment high. In case you hadn't noticed we are not doing that now.
It is because we have lowered effective demand. We have an imbalance between the total supply in the economy and the total demand in the economy. There is more than enough financial capital, that is money, sitting on the side lines to boost the economy back to the potential GDP but they won't invest until there is an increase in demand. (There has been a small increase in business investment recently. I hope that it continues.) We need to raise demand and to do that we need to raise wages and to lower profits. The whole secret is balance.
Since we are asking ridiculous questions I have some for you. Why don't we drive all of the wages down towards zero? If increasing wages causes unemployment wouldn't we eliminate it by pushing down everyone's wages? Wouldn't you gladly see your own wages lowered to keep everyone employed?
Are there any downsides to lowering everyone's wages?