RichardR said:
Federal Reserve economist Peter Tulip calculated that the relative reduction in value of the minimum wage over a period of 20 years reduced the US equilibrium rate of unemployment by 1.5%.
Do Minimum Wages Raise the NAIRU?
Another possibility is that the minimum wage acts as a safety net or “outside option” that affects workers’ bargaining
position. This interpretation seems consistent with (and would help to explain) the widespread view that the reduction in the NAIRU in the 1990s was due to worker insecurity.
Yes, I would agree to that, which is part of my overall point. Capitalism works through conflicts of interest. It's not a system where everyone wins. That's fine as long as we honestly recognize that fact.
Yes, inflation was reduced because of an increase in worker insecurity.
What his paper fails to do though is look at all wages and all forms of income, not just minimum wage and average wage.
Minimum wage can increase without increasing inflation if profits go down, or other means are used to reduce the overall cost of production of goods and services.
In theory if the cost of production stays the same then there should be no rise in prices for goods due to that factor, only due to increased demand, wich can occure from an increase in prosperity, but in that case upper limits are set, not lower limits, which is much more acceptable.
So, if #1 profits are reduced and or #2 the cost of other elements of production are reduced, i.e. more automation and use of computer, etc that save money are used then production should be abel to be increased to match a rising demand on a per unit basis with the cost of production staying the same, the employment staying the same, and the rate of production going up to match a demand that is goign up becuase of higher wages, such that if demand and production both go up by the same amount then prices should stay the same, and then you have no inflation, stable prices, and an increasing standard of living for the population. This can only happen if profits are limited, wages increase, and production increases.... i.e. socialism...
Oh well, don't mind that.