Totovader - the purpose of MW is not to create jobs. It is to give a fair wage to workers.
Considering that the minority population
loses their jobs because of minimum wage increases and regulations- do you consider that a "fair wage" can be accomplished by instituting minimum wage?
Try the math.
How many workers on the MW level in 2003? 2.1 million
The proposed increase is higher, but let's say it's a dollar an hour. And assume, like the OP that say 4 (heck, let's say ...5)... 5% lose their jobs.
That's over a hundred thousand jobs lost, but still nearly two million workers at that level. Again, this is conservative.*
Two million workers at an extra dollar per hour is two million dollars per hour or 80 million per week if they work a forty hour week. Multiply that times 52 weeks and you get four billion, easily.
So, let's assume that many work 20 hour weeks, or assume that all of them work 20 hour weeks. That will take you down to the two billion figure, but that's very conservative*, as I've said.
It's also arbitrary and not based on any fact. I understand your calculations- but I find them to be overly simplistic. It's not looking at individual workers, it's considering them as one, which is painfully socialistic- it also doesn't consider where that money is coming from. If the minimum wage increases the standard of living at the same time it increases the cost of living, how can you insinuate that it's a profit?
And I don't know why you guys keep assuming the inflationary spiral. You do realize that all your clothing, toys, and furniture are made over here, don't you? Please go into IKEA and check the price of a standard model desk today, and tell me that it goes up when MW goes up.
People making minimum wage are not purchasing their clothing, toys, and furniture from
Ikea... Not to mention that- even though these companies are manufacturing these goods elsewhere, they're
selling them here. They still need a workforce- they still need to pay taxes. To limit your scope to just the manufacturing sector is flawed... it also kind of has that odor of socialism again.
The cost of labor, factored into the final purchase price for your goods is nearly negligible. (e.g. the plush toy you buy for your kid at 19.95.... labor is at six and a half cents!) I work in this industry and ship consumer goods from all over Asia into the markets in North America and Europe. (And yes, I fight for fair working wages over here, too.)
I posted a link to an article in my last thread which shows that we're not talking about plush toys. For your company- for your toys- it may be $.06, and maybe increasing the total cost of the product by a few dollars would cover all the labor involved, but when it's cheaper and easier to lay off those workers and merge their duties into other higher paid jobs to deal with the immediate cost, that's exactly what's going to happen.
If the tobacco lobbies fund a cancer study, you question it, don't you? If the alcohol lobby comes out with a report recommending Remy Martin for three year olds, I'd certainly have my worries. Check out EPI. The abbreviation is not a coincidence - they want to sound as though they're the Economic Policy Institute. They are NOT. They're a mouthpiece for the restaurant/fast food industries.
Questioning it is not the same as ad hominem. If you have any reason to challenge their findings- you can present that. To claim, however, that simply because they represent an interested party they should be ignored is fallacious. If anyone
should be heard on this issue- it's this group of individuals. Again, that link I provided showed you why.
If your argument is that you need to provide a "fair wage" by legislation- you would think that the restaurant and fast food industries wouldn't care... but instead they're trying to show that it's a bad idea: people lose their jobs, it hurts the economy, and it stifles competition.