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Could you support a 2-tiered minimum wage?

Could you support a 2-tiered minimum wage?


  • Total voters
    35
  • Poll closed .
Could you support a 2-tiered minimum wage?


  1. Under age 21 -- $8.00 an hour.
  2. Over age 21 -- $15.00 an hour.

nope... age is a horrible metric to determine the minimum worth of a man labor.....


well, unless you go ahead and ramp it up progressively so us 60 yr olds can have a minimum wage of a million bucks a year.:)
 
Not bothering to read the entire thread but if this hasn't been posted, here is some data to contemplate

In Australia for "junior employees", the minimum rates are:
Under 16 years of age $5.87
At 16 years of age $7.55
At 17 years of age $9.22
At 18 years of age $10.90
At 19 years of age $13.17
At 20 years of age $15.59.

A multi-tier wage system in a country with an unemployment rate of 5.7% in July, 2013

You are aware that the dynamics of their economy are very different from ours. I think that their economy is much more heavily dependent on the mining industry which has been booming.
 
I said I believed it should be raised to $10.00 an hour across the board, and you know this.

I knew it when you brought it up a couple posts then. Until that point, I was discussing the subject of the thread.

A minimum wage is necessary. Minimum wage increases have been imposed before without the "doomsday" scenario that you're falsely playing out. It would have MINIMAL impact on our economy.

I tell you what. Go back and quote for a doomsday scenario that I have outlined resulting from the increase in the minimum wage? A single one?

I agree. It would have a relatively small (though negative) effect on our economy. Unfortunately, that harm would be concentrated among our poor.

It pains you apparently to give people more money per hour.

No. It pains me to see our poor thrown out of work, or see them unable to ever find work. It pains me to watch us tell the most vulnerable among us "Sorry, the American dream of improving ones'-self through hard work is not for you. We sentence you to a lifetime of dependency because the value of your current labor offends us."

It also pains me to watch someone who knows better, and who should know me better, accuse someone of hating or wanting to hurt the poor because they disagree over the results of public policy. Who complains about being insulted here, but is so quick to castigate the intentions and morals of others.

I certainly hope that you are aware that some of our "minimum wage earners" are some of the HARDEST working people in this country.

Some of them certainly are. But most of them are not - which is why they are earning minimum wage. Even at a burger flipping joint, working harder than the bare minimum puts you out of the minimum wage range fairly quickly.

That is a retarded comment. Minimum wage does not hurt anyone.

...except for those who are unable to ever get a job because of it.

which (again) is precisely why we put the Minimum Wage Law into effect in the first place. It was precisely to keep our most vulnerable populaces from getting jobs, in the theory that they would then conveniently just die out, and leave the United States in a more racially advantageous position. If we didn't have a minimum wage - it was argued - blacks would be able to find and get jobs, jobs that should be going to white people. Thankfully, that turned out to be a complete crock, right? African American unemployment right now is pretty much negligible, right?

I entirely disagree with your premise. You have yet to provide any evidence that what you claim is the truth. Poor people are already trapped in poverty. Raising minimum wage does NOT hurt them. The same jobs will exist, just pay higher.

:doh well, it's hard to provide any evidence when you simply refuse to accept any evidence provided, Chris. I already cited for you demonstration of my claim.

People can read between the lines. You are insinuating that it would devastate our economy or at least hurt it badly, and that is a lie. Minimum wage has been raised in the past, and no such things have happened as a result.

I am not insinuating that it would devastate our economy, that is you engaging in a hyperbolic strawman. Minimum wage has been raised in the past and the main thing that has happened is an increase in the unemployment of our lowest-educated/skilled workforce.

I already stated MULTIPLE times that I disagree with doubling it. I think $10.00 an hour is good.

:shrug: I'll admit I don't keep up with your conversations with other people. However, if you want to discuss $10, okay. Why do you oppose doubling it? Why not $15 an hour?

Also, you know nothing about my employment or my worth, so stop making assumptions.

:shrug: I said only what you told me. My "assumption" was that you were not lying. If that was in error, let me know.

Asking for a raise is completely different than making McDonald's pay their employees 2 dollars more per hour/quote]

Not economically. In both cases you are demanding that they continue to express the same demand for a good or service (labor), despite a 35-40% increase in its price. You are making the same claim in both instances about elasticity for labor.

Also, MOST employers pay more than minimum wage as it is right now anyways.

That's right, and most employers who pay minimum wage offer fairly quick pay increases as people grow in experience and their labor becomes worth more. But they have to get that experience for their labor to be worth more. If you simply demand that introductory personnel be paid at the same rate (or higher) than current experienced personnel, all you do is reduce the employers' ability to offer people introductory positions.

Your own article says "not statistically significant."

Ah, no. What the National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper states is "the studies that focus on the least-skilled groups provide relatively overwhelming evidence of stronger disemployment effects for these groups. What they referred to as "not always (you left that out for some reason) statistically significant" is the effect across the entire workforce. Since only ~2% of the workforce is minimum wage to begin with, that is precisely what you would expect - a slight, though barely noticeable at all decrease in employment across the entire workforce, which is nonetheless concentrated and highly visible once you stop looking at the effect across all wage earners, and just look at what happens to the minimum wage earners.

And that is the TEEN unemployment numbers. Teens are hurting because of the bad economy and NOT because of any increase in minimum wage. That much should be obvious to a baby.

Well, no, because babies can't read. If babies could read, however, they would note that this chart is "Teenage Unemployment Rate Minus the Overall Employment Rate", meaning that the bad economy is already factored in.

See?

minwage.jpg


:)

You cannot just expect employees to accept this kind of pay when the profits of the company they are working for is 300% more. That is nothing but greed.

This doesn't even make any sense. Raising minimum wage isn't going to change who applies for these kinds of jobs.

That is correct. What it is going to change is their acceptance rate. They will continue to apply. Heck, I could apply for CEO positions across America. But I won't get hired - and so will more and more of them.

Because greedy companies want to hire people for as little money as possible.

Naturally. And greedy people want as much money as possible for as little labor as possible. Only when these two self-interested parties are able to come to mutually beneficial conditions can they make a trade. When you impose a minimum wage, you restrict the ability of self-interested parties to come to mutually beneficial conditions, thereby reducing trade (in this case, in the market of low-skill labor).

That is why we NEED a minimum wage. I can't even imagine the divide between rich and poor if there was no minimum wage requirement. It's really bad now and would be MUCH worse. Have you ever heard of robber barons? These are reasons why we have minimum wages and other conditions that must be met for workers.

No. The robber barons actually are not why we put in a minimum wage. Unions will often claim that, because Unions jumped on board once they realized they could negotiate contracts in multiples of the minimum wage, and then give themselves raises by publicly advocating for hikes in the minimum wage instead of fighting management on a contract renegotiation. But the people who actually originally called for and got minimum wage legislation were pretty obvious about what they thought thought the problem was. Decent White Folks who were trying to raise Decent White Families in Decent White Conditions... but who were being undercut by "Negros and mongrelized asian hordes." Sidney Webb (British Socialist) argued that "[o]f all ways of dealing with these unfortunate parasites, the most ruinous to the community is to allow them unrestrainedly to compete as wage earners". Edward Alsworth Ross (American Progressive) pointed out that since inferior races were content to live closer to a filthy state of nature than the Nordic man, they did not require a civilized wage. "The Coolie cannot outdo the American, but he can underlive him" was the problem, and the answer was to enact a civilized minimum wage that would put said savages out of wage competition. The authors of the Davis-Bacon Act were quite open about the fact that the intent was to keep cheap black laborers from "taking" jobs from whites.

now, the language has shifted, and the minimum wage is presented as a means of wealth-redistribution. the argument goes that any employer can afford to pay any worker minimum wage (plus taxes, plus the regulatory burden), and so they should be forced to do so, in order to make sure that the worker is getting enough resources from the employer. Unfortunately, this is in direct contradiction to historical reality - the originators of the minimum wage had a sounder grasp of economics than its' modern defenders. In practice, many workers today are not worth the minimum wage plus the cost of taxation plus the additional regulatory burden. It's a small percentage of the total workforce, but it is our poorer portion of the workforce. If you are part of the community that is young, urban, poor, black, and dropped out of high school because doing drugs or having a baby sounded like more fun at the time, then you face the harsh reality that under our current regime, you may be structurally unemployable, and the higher the minimum wage and regulatory costs, the less likely you are to ever be able to become employable. Oh, given some experience, some job skills, etc. you could become employable; but thanks to the higher cost whose threshold you cannot cross, you will never get that experience. Meanwhile, demand goes on, and the guys in the neighborhood a block over are all working 10-12 hours a day. Because they don't fall under minimum wage or regulatory laws - because they are illegal immigrants.

No, it's because we don't crack down on companies who hire illegals so that they can get labor at the lowest wages possible. Those employers need to be punished.

You will find me a solid proponent of mandating the use of the e-verify system. if you wanted to actually help poor people, that would be a fantastic way to go about it. But, like our drug issue, the flow across the border is partly driven by demand; demand that is created and increased every time we raise the price for hiring americans.
 
I knew it when you brought it up a couple posts then. Until that point, I was discussing the subject of the thread.

Well, I don't want to raise it to $15.00.

I tell you what. Go back and quote for a doomsday scenario that I have outlined resulting from the increase in the minimum wage? A single one?

Okay, maybe doomsday was a bit of an exaggeration, but you are making quite a big deal out of a 2 dollar wage increase. That is not going to effect anyone all that much. It was calculated in one of my links to come out as something which would normally cost $100, costing $100.10. In other words, things might increase because of this by pennies.

I agree. It would have a relatively small (though negative) effect on our economy. Unfortunately, that harm would be concentrated among our poor.

How do you explain that it will be harder for a poor person will get a job? Minimum wage is as low as an employer can legally pay an employee, and they will still need those minimum wage employees, regardless of whether or not a wage increase occurs.



No. It pains me to see our poor thrown out of work, or see them unable to ever find work. It pains me to watch us tell the most vulnerable among us "Sorry, the American dream of improving ones'-self through hard work is not for you. We sentence you to a lifetime of dependency because the value of your current labor offends us."

Again, I don't understand how you come to this conclusion. See my comment above this one.

It also pains me to watch someone who knows better, and who should know me better, accuse someone of hating or wanting to hurt the poor because they disagree over the results of public policy. Who complains about being insulted here, but is so quick to castigate the intentions and morals of others.

Did I ask you to unsubscribe from this thread and suggest that you're an idiot? I don't think so. I don't think you want to hurt them. I just think you don't understand the situation from their points of view. I was a waitress before, so I can relate. I actually made less than minimum wage as a waitress because they count your tips as wages, and when work was slow it really hurt.



Some of them certainly are. But most of them are not - which is why they are earning minimum wage. Even at a burger flipping joint, working harder than the bare minimum puts you out of the minimum wage range fairly quickly. ...except for those who are unable to ever get a job because of it.

That entirely depends upon your employer.

which (again) is precisely why we put the Minimum Wage Law into effect in the first place. It was precisely to keep our most vulnerable populaces from getting jobs, in the theory that they would then conveniently just die out, and leave the United States in a more racially advantageous position. If we didn't have a minimum wage - it was argued - blacks would be able to find and get jobs, jobs that should be going to white people. Thankfully, that turned out to be a complete crock, right? African American unemployment right now is pretty much negligible, right?

Lol! Link please. This sounds like conspiracy theory stuff.



well, it's hard to provide any evidence when you simply refuse to accept any evidence provided, Chris. I already cited for you demonstration of my claim.

The only "evidence" I've seen from you is a chart.

I am not insinuating that it would devastate our economy, that is you engaging in a hyperbolic strawman. Minimum wage has been raised in the past and the main thing that has happened is an increase in the unemployment of our lowest-educated/skilled workforce.

You keep repeating this. Please link to some evidence of this.



I'll admit I don't keep up with your conversations with other people. However, if you want to discuss $10, okay. Why do you oppose doubling it? Why not $15 an hour?

I don't see a need to increase it so much at one time.



I said only what you told me. My "assumption" was that you were not lying. If that was in error, let me know.

Asking for a raise is completely different than making McDonald's pay their employees 2 dollars more per hour/quote]

Not economically. In both cases you are demanding that they continue to express the same demand for a good or service (labor), despite a 35-40% increase in its price. You are making the same claim in both instances about elasticity for labor.

A 35-40% increase? That is a complete exaggeration and not at all true according what I've read.

That's right, and most employers who pay minimum wage offer fairly quick pay increases as people grow in experience and their labor becomes worth more. But they have to get that experience for their labor to be worth more. If you simply demand that introductory personnel be paid at the same rate (or higher) than current experienced personnel, all you do is reduce the employers' ability to offer people introductory positions.

You're funny. You seem to think that employers and businesses are so nice and fair to their employees. How many jobs have you had and in what fields? It seems odd that anyone with any type of experience in the working world, especially the minimum wage working world, would think that employers are always fair. There are a lot of different jobs where you are not offered any opportunities.



Ah, no. What the National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper states is "the studies that focus on the least-skilled groups provide relatively overwhelming evidence of stronger disemployment effects for these groups. What they referred to as "not always (you left that out for some reason) statistically significant" is the effect across the entire workforce. Since only ~2% of the workforce is minimum wage to begin with, that is precisely what you would expect - a slight, though barely noticeable at all decrease in employment across the entire workforce, which is nonetheless concentrated and highly visible once you stop looking at the effect across all wage earners, and just look at what happens to the minimum wage earners.

Is this data you gleaned from the chart, or did you post a link to this? I don't remember seeing a link.



Well, no, because babies can't read. If babies could read, however, they would note that this chart is "Teenage Unemployment Rate Minus the Overall Employment Rate", meaning that the bad economy is already factored in.

See?

minwage.jpg


:)

Okay, so I didn't pay much attention to your chart. :lol:

That is correct. What it is going to change is their acceptance rate. They will continue to apply. Heck, I could apply for CEO positions across America. But I won't get hired - and so will more and more of them.

I don't understand how you come to this conclusion.

Naturally. And greedy people want as much money as possible for as little labor as possible. Only when these two self-interested parties are able to come to mutually beneficial conditions can they make a trade. When you impose a minimum wage, you restrict the ability of self-interested parties to come to mutually beneficial conditions, thereby reducing trade (in this case, in the market of low-skill labor).

That's an interesting point, but I they would have no choice if it was a mandated minimum wage. You do realize that people still need to survive while they're finding their "dream job" right cpwill? They still have bills to pay, perhaps families to feed. Do actually expect that people can survive on less than 10.00 an hour, or that just because they can't live up to your expectations they should suffer?

No. The robber barons actually are not why we put in a minimum wage. Unions will often claim that, because Unions jumped on board once they realized they could negotiate contracts in multiples of the minimum wage, and then give themselves raises by publicly advocating for hikes in the minimum wage instead of fighting management on a contract renegotiation. But the people who actually originally called for and got minimum wage legislation were pretty obvious about what they thought thought the problem was. Decent White Folks who were trying to raise Decent White Families in Decent White Conditions... but who were being undercut by "Negros and mongrelized asian hordes." Sidney Webb (British Socialist) argued that "[o]f all ways of dealing with these unfortunate parasites, the most ruinous to the community is to allow them unrestrainedly to compete as wage earners". Edward Alsworth Ross (American Progressive) pointed out that since inferior races were content to live closer to a filthy state of nature than the Nordic man, they did not require a civilized wage. "The Coolie cannot outdo the American, but he can underlive him" was the problem, and the answer was to enact a civilized minimum wage that would put said savages out of wage competition. The authors of the Davis-Bacon Act were quite open about the fact that the intent was to keep cheap black laborers from "taking" jobs from whites.

Whatever the cause of a minimum wage was, that is not the reason why we have it now and it does protect workers from being raped by their employers wage wise. You cannot tell me that employers would not take advantage if there was no minimum wage. That is just naive.

now, the language has shifted, and the minimum wage is presented as a means of wealth-redistribution. the argument goes that any employer can afford to pay any worker minimum wage (plus taxes, plus the regulatory burden), and so they should be forced to do so, in order to make sure that the worker is getting enough resources from the employer. Unfortunately, this is in direct contradiction to historical reality - the originators of the minimum wage had a sounder grasp of economics than its' modern defenders. In practice, many workers today are not worth the minimum wage plus the cost of taxation plus the additional regulatory burden. It's a small percentage of the total workforce, but it is our poorer portion of the workforce. If you are part of the community that is young, urban, poor, black, and dropped out of high school because doing drugs or having a baby sounded like more fun at the time, then you face the harsh reality that under our current regime, you may be structurally unemployable, and the higher the minimum wage and regulatory costs, the less likely you are to ever be able to become employable. Oh, given some experience, some job skills, etc. you could become employable; but thanks to the higher cost whose threshold you cannot cross, you will never get that experience. Meanwhile, demand goes on, and the guys in the neighborhood a block over are all working 10-12 hours a day. Because they don't fall under minimum wage or regulatory laws - because they are illegal immigrants.

They most certainly are worth it. We need those people to do those jobs, whether you want to admit it or not.

You will find me a solid proponent of mandating the use of the e-verify system. if you wanted to actually help poor people, that would be a fantastic way to go about it. But, like our drug issue, the flow across the border is partly driven by demand; demand that is created and increased every time we raise the price for hiring americans.

Greed is no excuse for breaking the law and hiring illegals. Those companies that do should be punished harshly IMO.

Edit: I timed out replying to this post. Thankfully, I remembered to cut it so I could just paste it back on in reply. Also, I had to remove your emoticons because it said there were too many. Editing this reply was a real bitch! :lol:
 
:lol: Okay, I"m at the gym wasting my time here instead because I'm obsessive when it comes to this stuff, but it'll still have to be shorter.

Okay, maybe doomsday was a bit of an exaggeration, but you are making quite a big deal out of a 2 dollar wage increase. That is not going to effect anyone all that much. It was calculated in one of my links to come out as something which would normally cost $100, costing $100.10. In other words, things might increase because of this by pennies.

You are not suggesting a $2 increase. You are suggesting a $2.50 increase. This is important because:

A 35-40% increase? That is a complete exaggeration and not at all true according what I've read.

Well, you are suggesting an increase from $7.50 to $10.00.

10-7.50=2.50 2.50/7.5=.3333 .3333*100%=33.33% for a 33% immediate increase in wages, but the employer pays more than just wages when they purchase labor.

Employer Fica = 7.65% of Employee Income, and is added into the increase as well.

Employer portion for Unemployment Insurance = 6.2% of Employee Income and is added to the increase as well.
(And that's just the two side-increases that happen to come immediately to mind.)

So: 7.65%+6.2%=13.85% (13.85%*33.33%)= 4.62% 4.62%+33.33% = a minimum total of 37.95% to the employer, with a fudge factor (because states are probably going to differentiate, etc), and so 35-40% was a good range. You are suggesting that employers will respond to a 35-40% increase in labor costs without reducing their demand; this is ridiculously unlikely to be true.

How do you explain that it will be harder for a poor person will get a job?

Because labor has worth. Some labor is worth more than other labor - depending on the skill set, experience, etc of the worker. Some labor is not worth $7.50+the added costs of employing someone (see above). Additionally it is worth noting that the Small Business Association has calculated that the regulatory burden imposed by the federal and state governments comes out to around $10k for an employee. So, in order to get a job, a persons' labor has to be representable by (value added by individuals' labor) > (Wages+Taxes+($10,000/year)). When you increase the cost of Wages, you reduce the number of people whose labor is going to be able to come out on the positive side of that equation, and those people are going to be heavily concentrated in our poorest demographics.

Minimum wage is as low as an employer can legally pay an employee, and they will still need those minimum wage employees, regardless of whether or not a wage increase occurs

Naturally. But they will hire fewer of them, and prove more risk-resistant in who they hire. Middle Class kids with two parents will do well - statistically the employer will know that they are more likely to have been raised to show up on time, honor their commitments, have good reading skills, decent work ethics. Inner city kids who were raised by a single parent? Not so much.

Remember how it was a few months after the last minimum wage hike that we started seeing all those self-check out machines in Wal-Marts, and then other stores? What do you think happened to the positions that used to be open for running those lanes? What do you think happened to the people who filled or hoped to fill those positions?

When you increase the cost of low-value-added labor, you increase the relative benefit of investing in labor-replacing capital, or high-value-added labor capable of leveraging capital to replace many lower-value-added workers.

Again, I don't understand how you come to this conclusion. See my comment above this one.

People (including employers) have a natural aversion to paying more for things than they are worth. I couldn't be hired as a CEO because I would be a complete waste of that company's money - I do not have the skills nor experience to justify a CEO salary nor a CEO's responsibilities.

Did I ask you to unsubscribe from this thread and suggest that you're an idiot? I don't think so. I don't think you want to hurt them.

That's funny, because that is precisely what you said - specifically you stated that I wanted to keep them poor and trap them in poverty.

I just think you don't understand the situation from their points of view. I was a waitress before, so I can relate. I actually made less than minimum wage as a waitress because they count your tips as wages, and when work was slow it really hurt.

...and you think you're the only person who has ever done this?

FWIW, I spent three years working landscaping. You want to talk about backbreaking minimum wage labor? Haul rocks so that doctors can have a nice pathway through their backyard. Then I spent another two years as a waiter, in precisely the same situation that you were in. Then I got promoted to manager, and picked up an above-minimum-hourly wage that worked out to barely more than I had been making before. Then I enlisted into the Marine Corps as a Private First Class. Had our first child a year and a half later, though I was a Lance-Corporal (E3) then. Our pay charts are publicly available, though agreeably it wasn't minimum wage - divided by the hours we worked it came out to about $9.50.

I don't know what it's like? This is my family we are talking about. When you talk about low-education low-skilled minority kids that's my in laws. When you talk about single mothers that's my sister, my cousin, my aunts...

I understand the low-income point of view. I've been there. But you are pretending that employers are static entities, and non-responsive to the laws of economics. That is simply not true. The real minimum wage is "zero", and every time you increase the legal minimum wage, you increase the populace who has to default to that number because they cannot pass the new threshold.

Lol! Link please. This sounds like conspiracy theory stuff.

See below, though I think your reply was "it doesn't matter because that's not why we support it now". No. Unions and other members of the coalition post-FDR-election needed a better set of arguments, especially once Eugenics was so thoroughly discredited after WWII. So you simply drop a word from the argument, and instead of talking about "the white worker" you talk about "the worker".

But the effects of the policy are the same, and remain today - to deny opportunities to the most vulnerable portions of our populace, who are disproportionately made up of minorities.

The only "evidence" I've seen from you is a chart.

I linked a paper to you that was an amalgamation of the literature across the subject, and cited its' key findings.

However, the chart is particulalry poignant - because the effects should be more muted than that. Since teenagers are more likely to have the option of simply ceasing to look for work and going to play sports in high school with their free time (as they depend on their parents for sustenance), they are more likely to respond to losing work by simply dropping out of the labor force. That the effect is that strongly causal indicates that it is A) determinative and B) probably stronger than is demonstrated, due to the hidden numbers of those who would work, but went back to live on mom and dad instead.

I don't see a need to increase it so much at one time.

Why not? Don't you want them to have the additional money?

You're funny. You seem to think that employers and businesses are so nice and fair to their employees.

.....okay. You are aware that I have been arguing that employers will respond to employees becoming too expensive by firing or refusing to hire them?

How many jobs have you had and in what fields? It seems odd that anyone with any type of experience in the working world, especially the minimum wage working world, would think that employers are always fair. There are a lot of different jobs where you are not offered any opportunities.

Then you are free to leave that employer and get hired by his competitor, who will pay you what you are worth, and you can help him run your old boss into the dirt. Companies that do not pay their employees roughly what they are worth get wiped out by their competition, which does, and is therefore better able to attract and keep talent.

Is this data you gleaned from the chart, or did you post a link to this? I don't remember seeing a link.

I linked it for you in the original post, but here it is again

NBER Working Paper 12663 said:
We review the burgeoning literature on the employment effects of minimum wages - in the United States and other countries - that was spurred by the new minimum wage research beginning in the early 1990s. Our review indicates that there is a wide range of existing estimates and, accordingly, a lack of consensus about the overall effects on low-wage employment of an increase in the minimum wage. However, the oft-stated assertion that recent research fails to support the traditional view that the minimum wage reduces the employment of low-wage workers is clearly incorrect. A sizable majority of the studies surveyed in this monograph give a relatively consistent (although not always statistically significant) indication of negative employment effects of minimum wages. In addition, among the papers we view as providing the most credible evidence, almost all point to negative employment effects, both for the United States as well as for many other countries. Two other important conclusions emerge from our review. First, we see very few - if any - studies that provide convincing evidence
of positive employment effects of minimum wages, especially from those studies that focus on the broader groups (rather than a narrow industry) for which the competitive model predicts disemployment effects. Second, the studies that focus on the least-skilled groups provide relatively overwhelming evidence of stronger disemployment effects for these groups.


Okay, so I didn't pay much attention to your chart. :lol:

:) Fair nuff.

I don't understand how you come to this conclusion.

Because I start from the assumption that labor - like other goods and services - has to obey the laws of supply and demand.

That's an interesting point, but I they would have no choice if it was a mandated minimum wage. You do realize that people still need to survive while they're finding their "dream job" right cpwill? They still have bills to pay, perhaps families to feed. Do actually expect that people can survive on less than 10.00 an hour, or that just because they can't live up to your expectations they should suffer?

Well, tell me which is easier, Chris. $7.50 an hour? Or $0.00 an hour? My point is simply that in seeking to transit these workers from 7.50 an hour to 10.00 an hour, you are going to end up shoving many of them off to 0.00 an hour.

Whatever the cause of a minimum wage was, that is not the reason why we have it now and it does protect workers from being raped by their employers wage wise. You cannot tell me that employers would not take advantage if there was no minimum wage.

of course they would seek to minimize their costs - which is precisely what they are doing now. Just as employees will seek to maximize their income - which is precisely what they are doing now. What would happen without a minimum wage is that many workers currently unable to attain employment would suddenly become cheaper than finding other ways to meet (or not) the services they can provide, and so they would be hired. The idea that all current minimum wage earners are going to be shoved down to $3.50 an hour or something like that simply doesn't fit the facts - they are already worth $7.50 an hour. If an employer threatens to reduce their income, they can simply go to work for his competitors. See earlier piece about how employers stupid enough to do that get to watch their businesses die and be replaced by companies that don't.

They most certainly are worth it. We need those people to do those jobs, whether you want to admit it or not.

We need a few of the services performed, and want some of the services performed. We do not 'need' the current number of minimum wage positions filled by people - and if you make it too expensive to maintain them there, then they won't be there any more. They will instead be replaced by labor-saving capital or some other arrangement that is now cheaper than the newly-unemployed worker was going to be.

Greed is no excuse for breaking the law and hiring illegals. Those companies that do should be punished harshly IMO.

:shrug: again, you're not going to get much argument from me over the fact that we should enforce the law.

Editing this reply was a real bitch!

:D true story.
 
Could you support a 2-tiered minimum wage?


  1. Under age 21 -- $8.00 an hour.
  2. Over age 21 -- $15.00 an hour.


I find a FEDERALLY imposed minimum wage to be anathema to a proper federalist governmental system
 
:lol: Okay, I"m at the gym wasting my time here instead because I'm obsessive when it comes to this stuff, but it'll still have to be shorter.



You are not suggesting a $2 increase. You are suggesting a $2.50 increase. This is important because:



Well, you are suggesting an increase from $7.50 to $10.00.

10-7.50=2.50 2.50/7.5=.3333 .3333*100%=33.33% for a 33% immediate increase in wages, but the employer pays more than just wages when they purchase labor.

Employer Fica = 7.65% of Employee Income, and is added into the increase as well.

Employer portion for Unemployment Insurance = 6.2% of Employee Income and is added to the increase as well.
(And that's just the two side-increases that happen to come immediately to mind.)

So: 7.65%+6.2%=13.85% (13.85%*33.33%)= 4.62% 4.62%+33.33% = a minimum total of 37.95% to the employer, with a fudge factor (because states are probably going to differentiate, etc), and so 35-40% was a good range. You are suggesting that employers will respond to a 35-40% increase in labor costs without reducing their demand; this is ridiculously unlikely to be true.



Because labor has worth. Some labor is worth more than other labor - depending on the skill set, experience, etc of the worker. Some labor is not worth $7.50+the added costs of employing someone (see above). Additionally it is worth noting that the Small Business Association has calculated that the regulatory burden imposed by the federal and state governments comes out to around $10k for an employee. So, in order to get a job, a persons' labor has to be representable by (value added by individuals' labor) > (Wages+Taxes+($10,000/year)). When you increase the cost of Wages, you reduce the number of people whose labor is going to be able to come out on the positive side of that equation, and those people are going to be heavily concentrated in our poorest demographics.



Naturally. But they will hire fewer of them, and prove more risk-resistant in who they hire. Middle Class kids with two parents will do well - statistically the employer will know that they are more likely to have been raised to show up on time, honor their commitments, have good reading skills, decent work ethics. Inner city kids who were raised by a single parent? Not so much.

Remember how it was a few months after the last minimum wage hike that we started seeing all those self-check out machines in Wal-Marts, and then other stores? What do you think happened to the positions that used to be open for running those lanes? What do you think happened to the people who filled or hoped to fill those positions?

When you increase the cost of low-value-added labor, you increase the relative benefit of investing in labor-replacing capital, or high-value-added labor capable of leveraging capital to replace many lower-value-added workers.



People (including employers) have a natural aversion to paying more for things than they are worth. I couldn't be hired as a CEO because I would be a complete waste of that company's money - I do not have the skills nor experience to justify a CEO salary nor a CEO's responsibilities.



That's funny, because that is precisely what you said - specifically you stated that I wanted to keep them poor and trap them in poverty.



...and you think you're the only person who has ever done this?

FWIW, I spent three years working landscaping. You want to talk about backbreaking minimum wage labor? Haul rocks so that doctors can have a nice pathway through their backyard. Then I spent another two years as a waiter, in precisely the same situation that you were in. Then I got promoted to manager, and picked up an above-minimum-hourly wage that worked out to barely more than I had been making before. Then I enlisted into the Marine Corps as a Private First Class. Had our first child a year and a half later, though I was a Lance-Corporal (E3) then. Our pay charts are publicly available, though agreeably it wasn't minimum wage - divided by the hours we worked it came out to about $9.50.

I don't know what it's like? This is my family we are talking about. When you talk about low-education low-skilled minority kids that's my in laws. When you talk about single mothers that's my sister, my cousin, my aunts...

I understand the low-income point of view. I've been there. But you are pretending that employers are static entities, and non-responsive to the laws of economics. That is simply not true. The real minimum wage is "zero", and every time you increase the legal minimum wage, you increase the populace who has to default to that number because they cannot pass the new threshold.



See below, though I think your reply was "it doesn't matter because that's not why we support it now". No. Unions and other members of the coalition post-FDR-election needed a better set of arguments, especially once Eugenics was so thoroughly discredited after WWII. So you simply drop a word from the argument, and instead of talking about "the white worker" you talk about "the worker".

But the effects of the policy are the same, and remain today - to deny opportunities to the most vulnerable portions of our populace, who are disproportionately made up of minorities.



I linked a paper to you that was an amalgamation of the literature across the subject, and cited its' key findings.

However, the chart is particulalry poignant - because the effects should be more muted than that. Since teenagers are more likely to have the option of simply ceasing to look for work and going to play sports in high school with their free time (as they depend on their parents for sustenance), they are more likely to respond to losing work by simply dropping out of the labor force. That the effect is that strongly causal indicates that it is A) determinative and B) probably stronger than is demonstrated, due to the hidden numbers of those who would work, but went back to live on mom and dad instead.



Why not? Don't you want them to have the additional money?



.....okay. You are aware that I have been arguing that employers will respond to employees becoming too expensive by firing or refusing to hire them?



Then you are free to leave that employer and get hired by his competitor, who will pay you what you are worth, and you can help him run your old boss into the dirt. Companies that do not pay their employees roughly what they are worth get wiped out by their competition, which does, and is therefore better able to attract and keep talent.



I linked it for you in the original post, but here it is again






:) Fair nuff.



Because I start from the assumption that labor - like other goods and services - has to obey the laws of supply and demand.



Well, tell me which is easier, Chris. $7.50 an hour? Or $0.00 an hour? My point is simply that in seeking to transit these workers from 7.50 an hour to 10.00 an hour, you are going to end up shoving many of them off to 0.00 an hour.



of course they would seek to minimize their costs - which is precisely what they are doing now. Just as employees will seek to maximize their income - which is precisely what they are doing now. What would happen without a minimum wage is that many workers currently unable to attain employment would suddenly become cheaper than finding other ways to meet (or not) the services they can provide, and so they would be hired. The idea that all current minimum wage earners are going to be shoved down to $3.50 an hour or something like that simply doesn't fit the facts - they are already worth $7.50 an hour. If an employer threatens to reduce their income, they can simply go to work for his competitors. See earlier piece about how employers stupid enough to do that get to watch their businesses die and be replaced by companies that don't.



We need a few of the services performed, and want some of the services performed. We do not 'need' the current number of minimum wage positions filled by people - and if you make it too expensive to maintain them there, then they won't be there any more. They will instead be replaced by labor-saving capital or some other arrangement that is now cheaper than the newly-unemployed worker was going to be.



:shrug: again, you're not going to get much argument from me over the fact that we should enforce the law.



:D true story.

Gosh, this is like a novel! I don't feel like spending another half an hour right now, so I'll look at this one tomorrow if you don't mind. :)
 
I bet IRL Maggie Dee is someone you'd just love to have a leisurely breakfast with on a fine spring morning on the French Riviera
I voted yeah just cuz I agree the proles aren't capable of directing their lives and we must do it for them.
 
That doesn't mean it's not exploitation or that it shouldn't happen.

It's a mutually beneficial relationship - if it's exploitive, then it is so in both directions.

The natural state of mankind is nasty, brutish, and short. The option for third-world demographics to a 10-hour-a-day factory job is a 14-hour-a-day farm job. We are no more justified in looking down on them for choosing the former than our ancestors will be when they look at our current first-world lifestyles and ask how we could be so brutal as to [fill in the blank here - perhaps it's the fact that we have an 8 hour workday, or the fact that we actually drive to work, etc]
 
There are other factors at work, as well. She (your SIL) contributed to her own situation simply by having a kid while still single and not completely educated. Daycare is expensive and people force themselves off the work rolls because they cannot afford to work and live and pay daycare, so they go on some form of public assistance and stay home and watch their own kids. It's less the wage she could make, and more the decisions she herself made and their ramifications.

Your SIL may have family willing to watch her kid, as some do, but the scenario I laid out still applies for many.

Oh, no argument. When our neice was born we offered both to take the kid and (if she wanted) to take both of them - since she was still a minor I would have made her and her daughter both dependents, and she could have come and lived with us, we would have helped raise the little girl, she could have finished her education and started working away from her also-single-mothers' household and away from the destructive environment...

...she was originally excited, and then changed her mind. It turned out that she would have lost the free checks, you see, and so...... :(

We are still hoping that when we move back to the States that we will be able at least to take the girl for the summers. Let her see what a better functioning family looks like, give her a better shot than the set up she's currently getting.

You'll get no argument from me that my SIL is where she is because of her own choices. But I'm a believer in redemption, and I would look askance at anyone who would seek to strip away from her the chance to ever grow up (she is, after all, still 17), start making the right choices, and improve her life and the life of her daughter.
 
Gosh, this is like a novel! I don't feel like spending another half an hour right now, so I'll look at this one tomorrow if you don't mind. :)

:) Actually finding ways to improve the condition of our working poor is important to me, and I tend to get rather passionate about it.

:2razz: But I understand that I can be a bit machine-gun-ish :D No worries.
 
:lol: Okay, I"m at the gym wasting my time here instead because I'm obsessive when it comes to this stuff, but it'll still have to be shorter.



You are not suggesting a $2 increase. You are suggesting a $2.50 increase. This is important because:



Well, you are suggesting an increase from $7.50 to $10.00.

10-7.50=2.50 2.50/7.5=.3333 .3333*100%=33.33% for a 33% immediate increase in wages, but the employer pays more than just wages when they purchase labor.

Employer Fica = 7.65% of Employee Income, and is added into the increase as well.

Employer portion for Unemployment Insurance = 6.2% of Employee Income and is added to the increase as well.
(And that's just the two side-increases that happen to come immediately to mind.)

So: 7.65%+6.2%=13.85% (13.85%*33.33%)= 4.62% 4.62%+33.33% = a minimum total of 37.95% to the employer, with a fudge factor (because states are probably going to differentiate, etc), and so 35-40% was a good range. You are suggesting that employers will respond to a 35-40% increase in labor costs without reducing their demand; this is ridiculously unlikely to be true.



Because labor has worth. Some labor is worth more than other labor - depending on the skill set, experience, etc of the worker. Some labor is not worth $7.50+the added costs of employing someone (see above). Additionally it is worth noting that the Small Business Association has calculated that the regulatory burden imposed by the federal and state governments comes out to around $10k for an employee. So, in order to get a job, a persons' labor has to be representable by (value added by individuals' labor) > (Wages+Taxes+($10,000/year)). When you increase the cost of Wages, you reduce the number of people whose labor is going to be able to come out on the positive side of that equation, and those people are going to be heavily concentrated in our poorest demographics.



Naturally. But they will hire fewer of them, and prove more risk-resistant in who they hire. Middle Class kids with two parents will do well - statistically the employer will know that they are more likely to have been raised to show up on time, honor their commitments, have good reading skills, decent work ethics. Inner city kids who were raised by a single parent? Not so much.

Remember how it was a few months after the last minimum wage hike that we started seeing all those self-check out machines in Wal-Marts, and then other stores? What do you think happened to the positions that used to be open for running those lanes? What do you think happened to the people who filled or hoped to fill those positions?

When you increase the cost of low-value-added labor, you increase the relative benefit of investing in labor-replacing capital, or high-value-added labor capable of leveraging capital to replace many lower-value-added workers.



People (including employers) have a natural aversion to paying more for things than they are worth. I couldn't be hired as a CEO because I would be a complete waste of that company's money - I do not have the skills nor experience to justify a CEO salary nor a CEO's responsibilities.



That's funny, because that is precisely what you said - specifically you stated that I wanted to keep them poor and trap them in poverty.



...and you think you're the only person who has ever done this?

FWIW, I spent three years working landscaping. You want to talk about backbreaking minimum wage labor? Haul rocks so that doctors can have a nice pathway through their backyard. Then I spent another two years as a waiter, in precisely the same situation that you were in. Then I got promoted to manager, and picked up an above-minimum-hourly wage that worked out to barely more than I had been making before. Then I enlisted into the Marine Corps as a Private First Class. Had our first child a year and a half later, though I was a Lance-Corporal (E3) then. Our pay charts are publicly available, though agreeably it wasn't minimum wage - divided by the hours we worked it came out to about $9.50.

I don't know what it's like? This is my family we are talking about. When you talk about low-education low-skilled minority kids that's my in laws. When you talk about single mothers that's my sister, my cousin, my aunts...

I understand the low-income point of view. I've been there. But you are pretending that employers are static entities, and non-responsive to the laws of economics. That is simply not true. The real minimum wage is "zero", and every time you increase the legal minimum wage, you increase the populace who has to default to that number because they cannot pass the new threshold.



See below, though I think your reply was "it doesn't matter because that's not why we support it now". No. Unions and other members of the coalition post-FDR-election needed a better set of arguments, especially once Eugenics was so thoroughly discredited after WWII. So you simply drop a word from the argument, and instead of talking about "the white worker" you talk about "the worker".

But the effects of the policy are the same, and remain today - to deny opportunities to the most vulnerable portions of our populace, who are disproportionately made up of minorities.



I linked a paper to you that was an amalgamation of the literature across the subject, and cited its' key findings.

However, the chart is particulalry poignant - because the effects should be more muted than that. Since teenagers are more likely to have the option of simply ceasing to look for work and going to play sports in high school with their free time (as they depend on their parents for sustenance), they are more likely to respond to losing work by simply dropping out of the labor force. That the effect is that strongly causal indicates that it is A) determinative and B) probably stronger than is demonstrated, due to the hidden numbers of those who would work, but went back to live on mom and dad instead.



Why not? Don't you want them to have the additional money?



.....okay. You are aware that I have been arguing that employers will respond to employees becoming too expensive by firing or refusing to hire them?



Then you are free to leave that employer and get hired by his competitor, who will pay you what you are worth, and you can help him run your old boss into the dirt. Companies that do not pay their employees roughly what they are worth get wiped out by their competition, which does, and is therefore better able to attract and keep talent.



I linked it for you in the original post, but here it is again






:) Fair nuff.



Because I start from the assumption that labor - like other goods and services - has to obey the laws of supply and demand.



Well, tell me which is easier, Chris. $7.50 an hour? Or $0.00 an hour? My point is simply that in seeking to transit these workers from 7.50 an hour to 10.00 an hour, you are going to end up shoving many of them off to 0.00 an hour.



of course they would seek to minimize their costs - which is precisely what they are doing now. Just as employees will seek to maximize their income - which is precisely what they are doing now. What would happen without a minimum wage is that many workers currently unable to attain employment would suddenly become cheaper than finding other ways to meet (or not) the services they can provide, and so they would be hired. The idea that all current minimum wage earners are going to be shoved down to $3.50 an hour or something like that simply doesn't fit the facts - they are already worth $7.50 an hour. If an employer threatens to reduce their income, they can simply go to work for his competitors. See earlier piece about how employers stupid enough to do that get to watch their businesses die and be replaced by companies that don't.



We need a few of the services performed, and want some of the services performed. We do not 'need' the current number of minimum wage positions filled by people - and if you make it too expensive to maintain them there, then they won't be there any more. They will instead be replaced by labor-saving capital or some other arrangement that is now cheaper than the newly-unemployed worker was going to be.



:shrug: again, you're not going to get much argument from me over the fact that we should enforce the law.



:D true story.

"but it'll still have to be shorter."

how's that working out for you?
 
The 3rd world is welcome to lift itself out of poverty; my concern is keeping the US from falling into poverty, and in the long term that will be the net outcome of industrial and service outsourcing and illegal labor for a large percentage of American citizens, and probably the country as a whole.

We are not the world, we are America. Let us take care of America first, and worry about the rest of the world when WE are not on the verge of insolvency and economic collapse.

The same concerns were raised when we put NAFTA into place - and the time period after that was one of the great explosions of the American economy, with benefits at all income deciles. The idea that free trade will cause us to fall into poverty is an idea that has been disproven more than any other economic claim that I am aware of. Mercantilism is a sure path to becoming as rich as Spain.

I agree with you that we are on the verge of governmental insolvency. But the solution you are proposing would make our fiscal position worse, not better. We've tried it before. It turned out badly.

Nor am I willing to toss those poorer than myself over the side quite so easily. The "improve yourself through work" model is precisely what we desperately want our own poor to achieve - why should we seek to cut off others from that method of improving their lives and the lives of their families simply because of the geography of their birth? You are a Christian - does Christ recognize a greater difference between American and Vietnamese than He does between Jew and Gentile?
 
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takes one to know one ;)
hah reminds once when the wife was lookin' through her DSM-IV-TR and said: oh look 301.4 that's YOU!
 
takes one to know one ;)
hah reminds once when the wife was lookin' through her DSM-IV-TR and said: oh look 301.4 that's YOU!

Yeah. :( I gave up on cardio today. Maybe tonight I'll recapture that time.
 
:lol: Okay, I"m at the gym wasting my time here instead because I'm obsessive when it comes to this stuff, but it'll still have to be shorter.

There are worse obsessions. :mrgreen:

You are not suggesting a $2 increase. You are suggesting a $2.50 increase. This is important because:



Well, you are suggesting an increase from $7.50 to $10.00.

10-7.50=2.50 2.50/7.5=.3333 .3333*100%=33.33% for a 33% immediate increase in wages, but the employer pays more than just wages when they purchase labor.

Employer Fica = 7.65% of Employee Income, and is added into the increase as well.

Employer portion for Unemployment Insurance = 6.2% of Employee Income and is added to the increase as well.
(And that's just the two side-increases that happen to come immediately to mind.)

So: 7.65%+6.2%=13.85% (13.85%*33.33%)= 4.62% 4.62%+33.33% = a minimum total of 37.95% to the employer, with a fudge factor (because states are probably going to differentiate, etc), and so 35-40% was a good range. You are suggesting that employers will respond to a 35-40% increase in labor costs without reducing their demand; this is ridiculously unlikely to be true.



Because labor has worth. Some labor is worth more than other labor - depending on the skill set, experience, etc of the worker. Some labor is not worth $7.50+the added costs of employing someone (see above). Additionally it is worth noting that the Small Business Association has calculated that the regulatory burden imposed by the federal and state governments comes out to around $10k for an employee. So, in order to get a job, a persons' labor has to be representable by (value added by individuals' labor) > (Wages+Taxes+($10,000/year)). When you increase the cost of Wages, you reduce the number of people whose labor is going to be able to come out on the positive side of that equation, and those people are going to be heavily concentrated in our poorest demographics.


Okay, fair enough. I didn't consider that employers have so many taxes to pay. I agree that the federal government imposes way too many taxes and fees on employers and businesses. I think that is also something that should be fixed to make our country more business friendly.

Naturally. But they will hire fewer of them, and prove more risk-resistant in who they hire. Middle Class kids with two parents will do well - statistically the employer will know that they are more likely to have been raised to show up on time, honor their commitments, have good reading skills, decent work ethics. Inner city kids who were raised by a single parent? Not so much.

I disagree. I've known many, many poor kids who were MUCH more responsible and less spoiled than upper class and a lot of middle class kids too. A lot of them had no choice, if they wanted things for themselves, they had to work for it. You like to put people into boxes due to their economic/social status, and that's not fair. I find you to be extremely judgmental when it comes to such things.

Remember how it was a few months after the last minimum wage hike that we started seeing all those self-check out machines in Wal-Marts, and then other stores? What do you think happened to the positions that used to be open for running those lanes? What do you think happened to the people who filled or hoped to fill those positions?

You have no evidence that this has anything to do with anything other than technological advancements. :lol:

When you increase the cost of low-value-added labor, you increase the relative benefit of investing in labor-replacing capital, or high-value-added labor capable of leveraging capital to replace many lower-value-added workers.

Well, like I said before, that's not the fault of the workers but the way our system works. You can't expect people to accept $7.50 an hour forever you know. Lol!

I'm ending this here for now. I'll look at the rest later.
 
Could you support a 2-tiered minimum wage?

  1. Under age 21 -- $8.00 an hour.
  2. Over age 21 -- $15.00 an hour.
No. I have too much faith in:

1) Systems that work infinitely better when we leave them alone than we do presuming a knowledge we don't possess w/r to "fixing" them.
2) Human decency
 
There is still no getting the facts.

Manufacturing has left, and is highly unlikely to come back. And besides, government force applied through Unions was the only thing making those jobs moderately high paying. Before unionization, THOSE were the McJobs. They were worse than our current McJobs, of course, because prior to the rise of union power, there were minimal government imposed standards on employers. Employers responded by moving their operations to places without safety and labor standards, and no unions imposing higher wages.

The number one employer is Walmart, the number two employer is a temp agency. And this trend is growing. Pretty soon, retail will be the new manufacturing, in this country. Instead of line workers, we have stockers and cashiers. Etc.

Can our economy be sustained by a nation of "McJob" workers?
 
The same concerns were raised when we put NAFTA into place - and the time period after that was one of the great explosions of the American economy, with benefits at all income deciles. The idea that free trade will cause us to fall into poverty is an idea that has been disproven more than any other economic claim that I am aware of. Mercantilism is a sure path to becoming as rich as Spain.

I agree with you that we are on the verge of governmental insolvency. But the solution you are proposing would make our fiscal position worse, not better. We've tried it before. It turned out badly.

Nor am I willing to toss those poorer than myself over the side quite so easily. The "improve yourself through work" model is precisely what we desperately want our own poor to achieve - why should we seek to cut off others from that method of improving their lives and the lives of their families simply because of the geography of their birth? You are a Christian - does Christ recognize a greater difference between American and Vietnamese than He does between Jew and Gentile?


We're talking about national policy here, not religious principle. It would be nice if all men were as brothers, sure... but you know that isn't so and isn't going to be so anytime soon. If we go that route, of having the US gov't deciding national policy based on what is best for the average Vietnamese and Indonesian as being of equal importance as what's best for the average American... then what is the point in HAVING a national government? Might as well close shop and tell the UN they're in charge.
 
We're talking about national policy here, not religious principle. It would be nice if all men were as brothers, sure... but you know that isn't so and isn't going to be so anytime soon. If we go that route, of having the US gov't deciding national policy based on what is best for the average Vietnamese and Indonesian as being of equal importance as what's best for the average American... then what is the point in HAVING a national government? Might as well close shop and tell the UN they're in charge.

Seriously, don't joke about that. More people want that than you probably realize.
 
The small problem with the two tier wage is that would it not just make Stores or Fast food establishments like McDonalds just hire more teens than adults .

A better Idea it starts the same Minnum wage as it is now and based on how well you work and your consistence and loyalty to your job will earn you more money .
 
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