Boost_Crazy said:
I'd like to chime in on minimum wage.
I believe that the argument that minimum wage should be a living wage is completely out of touch with the real world. It should not be expected that minimum wage could support an individual, let alone a family.
Minimum wage is a training wage for people with no skills to offer. It's for kids summer jobs or part time jobs while in school. Or for a retired person to pass time and earn a bit of supplemental income. An adult cannot support themselves, much less a family. That is not a tragedy, that is how it is designed. If as an able bodied adult, you have not acquired work skills or experience to move beyond minimum wage, you need to work multiple jobs until you acquire such skills. It may suck for a bit, but it's the consequence of not finishing school, not working hard, or simply bring an shiny happy person that can't keep a job due to their attitude.
If one with skills or experience can't get a job due to no jobs available, they need to move where the jobs are. It's kept people from starving throughout human existence. You need to follow the herd.
I argue that raising the minimum wage does more harm to the people that it trying to help than good. Remember those teenagers that used to work the minimum wage jobs? Those training jobs where they could learn how not to screw up before it did any real harm. They were better prepared when they got their "real" jobs later. Minimum wage goes up, and now it's tougher to hire a kid with limited availability where you need to work around their school schedule. How about that guy trying to turn it about with the questionable work history. Maybe worth the gamble, but not at a higher wage. Definitely not this day and age where it takes an act of congress to fire an employee that doesn't work out. Safer to not hire them in the first place.
Raising wages also raises prices. It becomes an exercise in chasing ones tail.
The final blow to unskilled workers is automation. Self check outs and order taking kiosks are replacing workers. It's math, the cheaper automation gets and the more expensive unskilled labor gets, the more jobs will be cut. And minimum wage jobs are very important! Not to support families, but as an educational tool to new workforce participants.
The way I see it we have a couple different arguments here. One, what minimum wage should be and two, the lack of jobs due to globalization and automation. Forget the latter for this conversation
Now let’s talk economics. Let’s say it costs 100 widgets to live and not be homeless. Hereafter this will be considered the living wage. Let’s say McDonalds pays their employees 50 widgets for providing minimum skills. Since this is not enough to survive, Uncle Sam throws in an extra 50 widgets in the form of welfare. They are still getting 100 widgets, but Uncle Sam is subsidizing McDs with 50 widgets.
Those of you that are arguing that 100 widgets are too much and they should get a real job are failing to get the point. They are still getting 100 widgets. It’s just coming directly out of your pocket instead of the pockets of shareholders.
Those of you arguing that McDs will just replace them with computers at the rate of 75 widgets and then they will be jobless…you’re exactly right! Only thing is, this is a GOOD THING! These are the jobs we want (designing, maintaining, fixing computers). These are more desirable jobs. You don’t see us going back to an abacus just to create millions of jobs that were taken away from computers.
The rest of you are just pissed off because you make less than $15 an hour and you’re a little jealous that Sam 6pack can make that at McDonalds pushing buttons on a computer. That’s the beauty of it. If you could get a unskilled job for $15 an hour other companies are going to have to bump their wages up to $20 in order to compete.
Take a look at the economics behind the last few hikes in the minimum wage. It’s been great for the economy. I’m not saying $15 is the right number but it does seem like a good starting point for negotiations. There will be winners and losers. Some people are going to lose their jobs but others will gain better jobs. The main difference is instead of Tommy Taxpayer paying for cheap labor for McDonalds, Suzie Shareholder will get slightly smaller dividends every year. It comes down to this, do you want to require companies to pay a living wage to employees or do you, as a kind and caring person willing to donate your hard earned money (taxes) to the government so THEY can decide how to prop up the economy. "
Signed - A McDonalds Shareholder