DBT
Contributor
If a firm is unable or unwilling to pay a fair market rate for the work performed by its employees, or generally manage its running costs, which includes wages, it should not be in business.
Increase price, demand drops. Economics 101. The only question is how elastic the response is.The absence of a detectable signal is not evidence of a signal.An absence of a detectable signal is not evidence of the absence of the signal!
In essence , you are maintaining faith-based economics: it’s true regardless of the evidence to the contrary.
Yeah, that's because it's an absurd concept, like the number of vertices in a square triangle.The thing is we have no measurement of unemployment-rate-of-minimum-wage-workers.
That's true of commodities.Increase price, demand drops. Economics 101.
Technically, in Econ 101, increase price, quantity demanded ( not demand) drops. But in ECON 101 that is a partial equilibrium result- it is the effect in the market with the price increase.Increase price, demand drops. Economics 101. The only question is how elastic the response is.The absence of a detectable signal is not evidence of a signal.An absence of a detectable signal is not evidence of the absence of the signal!
In essence , you are maintaining faith-based economics: it’s true regardless of the evidence to the contrary.
It is not certain the effect is not zero. An increase in the minimum wage may induce a small reduction in hours worked but no job losses. An increase in the minimum wage that keeps the minimum wage below the market wage will have no effect.Loren Pechtel said:It is certain that the effect is not zero, all these studies prove is that it's below the detection threshold. However, the nature of the available data means the detection threshold is beyond anything we will actually see except in extreme cases (American Samoa.)
Of course it's absurd. That's why we can't measure it.Yeah, that's because it's an absurd concept, like the number of vertices in a square triangle.The thing is we have no measurement of unemployment-rate-of-minimum-wage-workers.
By definition, minimum wage workers (like all workers) aren't unemployed.
And while you can define a labour's force as (workers)+(unemployed people who are looking for work), that latter group cannot be divided up by income, for reasons that I hope are obvious.
You aren't addressing my point at all.A burger flipper on minimum wage who then gets fired becomes an unemployed person. But as you don't know anything at all about what wage he might earn in his next role, it's absurd to consider him "minimum wage unemployed".
Indeed, one of the benefits of workers being laid off is that it breaks their inertia - in my personal experience, the biggest increases in my income have resulted from changing employers. rather than from getting a raise or even a promotion.
Lots of people out there will keep working for less than they might get elsewhere, if only because they're too busy working to go looking for a better paid job. Although (misplaced) loyalty to their employer also plays a big part.
I am making no such assumption, although minimum wage workers are generally pretty interchangeable as they rarely have specialized skills.That's true of commodities.Increase price, demand drops. Economics 101.
Workers aren't commodities. Their value varies from job to job and from time to time.
There is no price for "workers". Each instance of a worker is unique, and what they will accept, what they can achieve, and what they will actually achieve, changes constantly.
Your assumptions here, that minimum wage workers are all interchangeable; and that they are all incapable of anything other than minimum wage work, are nonsensical - but you don't even state them, much less examine them.
An increase in the minimum wage below market clearing price has zero effect good or bad. Why are you even bringing it up other than to disrupt the discussion?It is not certain the effect is not zero. An increase in the minimum wage may induce a small reduction in hours worked but no job losses. An increase in the minimum wage that keeps the minimum wage below the market wage will have no effect.Loren Pechtel said:It is certain that the effect is not zero, all these studies prove is that it's below the detection threshold. However, the nature of the available data means the detection threshold is beyond anything we will actually see except in extreme cases (American Samoa.)
Yeah, American Samoa. That's the only data point we have.Nor is it the case that the nature of available data means the detection is not possible. At the national level that is true but not necessarily at the state or local level.
There’s a big part of your problem. Demanding proof of a negative is a feeble retreat. It is incumbent upon you not only to imagine a mechanism, but to demonstrate its operation IRL and prove that your hypothetical cause (raised minimum wage) always has the same outcome (reduced workforce). You now know that semantically that’s not true (unemployed are still in the workforce) but insist that net possible productivity goes down. The counter argument is that higher minimum wage enables people at the bottom to do more work because they can eat, and they might be more available to more employers because might have access to transportation, they become more active consumers etc etc. and so raised minimum wages produce an overall positive impact on the health of the economy.The problem is that if you are actually going to show that raising the minimum wage doesn't cause unemployment you need to measure this…
First, it shows that your claim that a minimum wage increase causes a loss in jobs. Second, it shows that the effect of a minimum wage increase depends on the context. Third, it shows the effect of a minimum wage increase is an empirical question. Fourth, there are multiple minimum wages in some area - the national minimum wage, the state minimum wage and perhaps a local one. It is entirely possible that an increase in the national minimum wage has no effect on jobs in states where the state minimum wage is higher than the national one.An increase in the minimum wage below market clearing price has zero effect good or bad. Why are you even bringing it up other than to disrupt the discussion?It is not certain the effect is not zero. An increase in the minimum wage may induce a small reduction in hours worked but no job losses. An increase in the minimum wage that keeps the minimum wage below the market wage will have no effect.Loren Pechtel said:It is certain that the effect is not zero, all these studies prove is that it's below the detection threshold. However, the nature of the available data means the detection threshold is beyond anything we will actually see except in extreme cases (American Samoa.)
And that point is muddled because there were a number of influences affecting Samoa at that time.Yeah, American Samoa. That's the only data point we have.Nor is it the case that the nature of available data means the detection is not possible. At the national level that is true but not necessarily at the state or local level.
Not my problem--the claim is that it doesn't kill jobs. I'm simply pointing out that they're trying to prove a negative.There’s a big part of your problem. Demanding proof of a negative is a feeble retreat. It is incumbent upon you not only to imagine a mechanism, but to demonstrate its operation IRL and prove that your hypothetical cause (raised minimum wage) always has the same outcome (reduced workforce). You now know that semantically that’s not true (unemployed are still in the workforce) but insist that net possible productivity goes down. The counter argument is that higher minimum wage enables people at the bottom to do more work because they can eat, and they might be more available to more employers because might have access to transportation, they become more active consumers etc etc. and so raised minimum wages produce an overall positive impact on the health of the economy.The problem is that if you are actually going to show that raising the minimum wage doesn't cause unemployment you need to measure this…
I would challenge you Loren to show that that is not the case, if we’re going to indulge in proving negatives.
"MW kills jobs" would be the fallacious positive statement IMO.I'm simply pointing out that they're trying to prove a negative.
Indeed; And the lower their pay was to begin with, the more pronounced the effect will be.I'm no economist, but I would think that if someone got paid more they would spend more. Thus, creating more jobs.
American Samoa. It most certainly did."MW kills jobs" would be the fallacious positive statement IMO.I'm simply pointing out that they're trying to prove a negative.
What I'm saying is that the detection limits are incredibly coarse and incapable of seeing even large signals. It takes something like American Samoa to rise above the detection threshold.But it should be provable as a principle via consistent and measurable quanta of workers at a given wage level within an area. If it's is below detection limits/noise threshold, then it serves as poor excuse for foregoing the predicted positive benefits of raising the fucking minimum wage (at least to a ballpark level where a couple could conceivably raise a kid on two incomes).
Remember - you're going to need those (uneducated) kids to be fit and healthy when they show of for workforce duty!
The problem here is that you are assuming a static environment.Indeed; And the lower their pay was to begin with, the more pronounced the effect will be.I'm no economist, but I would think that if someone got paid more they would spend more. Thus, creating more jobs.
The faults in that case study have been pointed out to you over and over in this thread. Do you think banging the same gong over and over is the same thing as proving that it is somehow relevant?American Samoa. It most certainly did.
Why should anyone care more about a undetectable fault than they do about their livelihoods? Why should anyone?It takes something like American Samoa to rise above the detection threshold.
Faulty data point one.American Samoa. It most certainly did.
So it’s a useless exercise, except when used in one single faulty study?detection limits are incredibly coarse and incapable of seeing even large signals
Actually, you are the one assuming a static world with your assumption that prices rise at the same rate as inflation.The problem here is that you are assuming a static environment.Indeed; And the lower their pay was to begin with, the more pronounced the effect will be.I'm no economist, but I would think that if someone got paid more they would spend more. Thus, creating more jobs.
In the real world wages rise, prices rise -- in other words, inflation. The people higher up the ladder demand more also. You end up with the original scale except now the economy has suffered damage from inflation.
Are you sure that is what you wanted to say or should the word wages be used instead of the word inflation?Actually, you are the one assuming a static world with your assumption that prices rise at the same rate as inflation.