All minimum wage should be eliminated.. It's stupid..
It's too much of the workers competing for jobs, not enough of companies competing for workers..
That's not how business works. You don't "start with a pay grade". Are you suggesting subsidized pay grades over and above what the market will bear?
If these jobs are so poorly paying with little benefits, it seems to me one option might be to learn a skilled trade and work for yourself starting a business.You have to be a strategist now.
More people going to school hasn't really helped.
It just caused employers to require even more education, to reduce the number of applicants.
Getting an inside advantage, even if the work is not in your field, is what people should be doing, in my opinion.
My company shows greater interest to inside applicants, rather than outside.
Even if the position is from lowly machine operator to higher office worker.
90 days might work for some industries but not others, I can think of many situations where a company needs temps for longer than that.
If these jobs are so poorly paying with little benefits, it seems to me one option might be to learn a skilled trade and work for yourself starting a business.
My daughter got a BSN nursing degree, so her & her classmates did pretty well right-out-of-the-box landing decent gigs. My boy just started studying for a finance degree, so after the first two years he'll decide between the finance or accounting concentration, so he might do O.K., but it remains to seen.
The nursing and finance/accounting kids have both been starting at reasonably paying salaries in my neck-of-the-woods (very large U.S. city).
But for kids that aren't choosing in-demand degrees or in places with high demand, I'd probably consider following their education with a skilled trade or some other entrepreneurial endeavor. If they're going to work for peanuts and no bennies, may as well take a crack at building something for yourself. Guys in my city have become millionaires selling hot dogs and pizza!
All minimum wage should be eliminated.. It's stupid..
It's too much of the workers competing for jobs, not enough of companies competing for workers..
I'm completely out of touch with entry level jobs, but what you describe above strikes me as pretty pitiful, particularly the CS guy.
Just how hard is it to gain a skill which pays more than minimum wage AND gain a job in that skill set AND keep that job (IE:not losing a job due to being laid off... not counting firings)?
A lot of people throw out the phrase "gain a skill that will pay more than minimum wage!" like it's the easiest thing in the world to do but they never address the amount of available jobs in those given areas vs how many people there are in this country. 318 million people in this country and rising. At least half of which are of working age. Are job availability in those areas that require a higher skill set also rising on an even pace with the amount of people that are able to work in this country? This is something that I never see them address. Yet they love to holler and scream about people that only work minimum wage jobs. So, I'd like to see them address this.
So, what is the current job rate of above minimum wage jobs to available working population ratio? Can you guarantee that everyone will have jobs that pay above minimum wage? <--- This is assuming that EVERYONE was able to gain a skill set that pays above minimum wage. Of course we know that assumption to be wrong don't we? We know that there are people out there that are straight up incapable of achieving any type of skill set that pays above minimum wage. Yet they will be ignored, as always.
There are a few options, sales is one of them. Like anything else it is a developed skill set and can pay extremely well. In some areas landscaping pays well, I know I was paying on average $18 an hour with a staging wage of $12.
And there is always secondary trades, any equipment operator will pay well above minimum wage.
however I advise people who maybe don't have the grades to go to college to seek a trade, metal working, tool and die, carpentry etc.
As I aged my opportunities narrowed so I started my own business. There are times when you may do without, but in the end you have the control over how much you make.
There are a few options, sales is one of them. Like anything else it is a developed skill set and can pay extremely well.
There are a few options, sales is one of them. Like anything else it is a developed skill set and can pay extremely well.
All minimum wage should be eliminated.. It's stupid..
It's too much of the workers competing for jobs, not enough of companies competing for workers..
Just how hard is it to gain a skill which pays more than minimum wage AND gain a job in that skill set AND keep that job (IE:not losing a job due to being laid off... not counting firings)?
A lot of people throw out the phrase "gain a skill that will pay more than minimum wage!" like it's the easiest thing in the world to do but they never address the amount of available jobs in those given areas vs how many people there are in this country. 318 million people in this country and rising. At least half of which are of working age. Are job availability in those areas that require a higher skill set also rising on an even pace with the amount of people that are able to work in this country? This is something that I never see them address. Yet they love to holler and scream about people that only work minimum wage jobs. So, I'd like to see them address this.
So, what is the current job rate of above minimum wage jobs to available working population ratio? Can you guarantee that everyone will have jobs that pay above minimum wage? <--- This is assuming that EVERYONE was able to gain a skill set that pays above minimum wage. Of course we know that assumption to be wrong don't we? We know that there are people out there that are straight up incapable of achieving any type of skill set that pays above minimum wage. Yet they will be ignored, as always.
Wouldn't you say that those hollering for $15/hr wage are using that control over how much they make?
Another good example of people not needing a college degree IE: "Skill Set that is worth more than minimum wage".
So far I've seen two good examples of jobs that needs no college degree and yet pays more than minimum wage. One of them even being in the service industry which is where most jobs are now a days.
I have worked for the "going wage" at a few places, despite my being more willing and more able to do the harder jobs, but only until something better comes along.
The employer is to blame. The boss doesn't want to tell the slackers that they don't deserve more money than those who give
more than is expected, so the boss just quietly screws the better worker as long as the worker will allow it.
In the long run, usually, the more productive/willing/able worker is biding his time until an opportunity presents itself.
Then the boss has to deal with losing that employee. Been there, done that.....I left a few jobs and left a hole in the shop's ability to support the needed maintenance functions.
This $15 minimum is going to be very inflationary, that is my guess...
Another good example of people not needing a college degree IE: "Skill Set that is worth more than minimum wage".
So far I've seen two good examples of jobs that needs no college degree and yet pays more than minimum wage. One of them even being in the service industry which is where most jobs are now a days.
So what is your solution? Some of our fellow Americans are in need.
I am no stranger to the hard worker being screwed. Currently at my transmission shop, I am the only transmission mechanic, and we have 3 general auto mechanics. I am paid by the hour and the others paid by the job, and most of the year we hve more transmission work than general auto work.
Despite the fact most the time I have more work than the other three combined, I am often expected to pick up their slack, and recieve no help from them when I am overloaded and they are standing around. heck even when trashcans in ther work area get full I hear I don't get paid to do that we need an hourly b$tch to do it for us. The manager sides with them thinking somehow that they arent putting out work because someone does not clean up for them and be their assistant rather than the fact they work 15 minutes an hour tops.
I do get tired when in a mechanic field determined by flag hours that I can put out anywhere from 60- 140 flag hours a week when paid by the hour and I am called slow, yet no one can insult the master tech who barely flags 20 hours a week. Their solution to the problem has been to hire more general auto techs rather than enfore them tp do their job, or make me do their job while they cry they do not get enough flag hours, which is not because me but because they constantly do the absolute bare minimum. Even the slowest mechanics if they tried could pull 40 flag hours a week, these guys seem satisfied doing 15-20 hours a week then refusing to work.
Go solo bro..
Just how hard is it to gain a skill which pays more than minimum wage AND gain a job in that skill set AND keep that job (IE:not losing a job due to being laid off... not counting firings)?
A lot of people throw out the phrase "gain a skill that will pay more than minimum wage!" like it's the easiest thing in the world to do but they never address the amount of available jobs in those given areas vs how many people there are in this country. 318 million people in this country and rising. At least half of which are of working age. Are job availability in those areas that require a higher skill set also rising on an even pace with the amount of people that are able to work in this country? This is something that I never see them address. Yet they love to holler and scream about people that only work minimum wage jobs. So, I'd like to see them address this.
So, what is the current job rate of above minimum wage jobs to available working population ratio? Can you guarantee that everyone will have jobs that pay above minimum wage? <--- This is assuming that EVERYONE was able to gain a skill set that pays above minimum wage. Of course we know that assumption to be wrong don't we? We know that there are people out there that are straight up incapable of achieving any type of skill set that pays above minimum wage. Yet they will be ignored, as always.
I've found temp agencies to be the worst way to find work, but it probably depends on what part of the country you live in.Edit add: Some young folks don't know where to look, but temp agencies are a good start.