pipelineaudio
Philosopher
- Joined
- Feb 23, 2006
- Messages
- 5,092
Clearly, you are looking for a person with a particular viewpoint to argue against.
not at all
Clearly, you are looking for a person with a particular viewpoint to argue against.
not at all
All I'm hearing is crickets (okay, and the lady in the next cubicle yapping with her friends).Are there any minimum wage supporters here who believe that all work is worth at least $5.15/hour?
Just a little bump here. I asked more than 24 hours ago:
All I'm hearing is crickets (okay, and the lady in the next cubicle yapping with her friends).
Should I take that silence as meaning your collective answer is, "No, nobody here believes all work is worth at least $5.15 an hour."?
I'm against the minimum wage, but I disagree with your characterization that minimum wage supporters believe all work is worth at least $5.15 an hour. (After all, if everyone's work was worth at least that much, everyone would be paid at least that much).
They do, however, believe that everyone deserves to get paid at least a minimum, and that government should ensure a minimum standard of living for working people (and other similar arguments).
I wasn't characterizing them as such. I was asking if any minimum wage supporters believed it.I'm against the minimum wage, but I disagree with your characterization that minimum wage supporters believe all work is worth at least $5.15 an hour.
Emphasis mine. Do they? "Deserves" means, more or less, "earns," or, "has done something to become entitled to something else." There's the old Jack Benny line when he received an award: "I don't deserve this. But I also have arthritis, and I don't deserve that, either." In both cases, he was saying he hadn't done anything to merit the award, or the arthritis.They do, however, believe that everyone deserves to get paid at least a minimum...
Of course not. But I do believe that work that isn't worth $5.15/hour is not worth doing in a developed country like the US, and keeping people in such unproductive jobs is harmful for the economy as a whole. It is of course also harmful for the individuals.Are there any minimum wage supporters here who believe that all work is worth at least $5.15/hour?
If there were laws against employer collusion, why would players' unions need to persuade clubs to enter a voluntary agreement not to do so?The most famous one is in major league baseball. Here is the wiki:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baseball_collusion
There's no 'certification of unions' here unless I'm very much mistaken. What you see as a restriction for the employer (rather than 'company' which involves the employees at least as much as the employer), I see as relief for the employees. The employers could fire the strikers, but then the unions could put them into a blockade for doing so.What you see as a restriction on the union, I see as relief for the company. What really is at stake is not the right to strike, as you put it, but the right to go on strike and not get fired for it. The people could go on strike for what their company may be doing in Germany, but then the company can fire them for it. The laws that govern the certification of unions in a workplace are extremely slanted in favour of the employees.
I agree that there are less obstacles now than there was at Smith's time. But still, the restrictions are on the workers rights to collude - it still seems to me that employers are completely free to collude for any reason, without any restrictions at all.Previously, workers couldn't unionize at all. NOw, they can unionize, and the law is set up to make it easier for them to do that than ever before.
I'm against the minimum wage, but I disagree with your characterization that minimum wage supporters believe all work is worth at least $5.15 an hour. (After all, if everyone's work was worth at least that much, everyone would be paid at least that much).
They do, however, believe that everyone deserves to get paid at least a minimum, and that government should ensure a minimum standard of living for working people (and other similar arguments).
Of course not. But I do believe that work that isn't worth $5.15/hour is not worth doing in a developed country like the US,
and keeping people in such unproductive jobs is harmful for the economy as a whole. It is of course also harmful for the individuals.
We could perhaps re-state your question: Do you believe that all workers are capable of performing work worth at least $5.15/hour?
The bottom line being that by raising the minimum wage, everybody wins.
Of course not. But I do believe that work that isn't worth $5.15/hour is not worth doing in a developed country like the US, and keeping people in such unproductive jobs is harmful for the economy as a whole. It is of course also harmful for the individuals.
The bottom line being that by raising the minimum wage, everybody wins. The poor win more than the rich, but the rich win too.
Nonsense. There are damned few cases in economics where everybody wins, and this is most certainly not one of them. Hell, even the serious proponents of the minimum wage don't argue that: they only claim that the net benefit is worth the cost.
Even though they're unable to show what that net benefit is,
Because, from post 241: "It is not, however, difficult to foresee which of the two parties must, upon all ordinary occasions, have the advantage in the dispute, and force the other into a compliance with their terms."Who are you to make that decision? Honestly, why can't an employee and an employer make a different decision?
I very much doubt that many face this dilemma. In fact, as others have pointed out, even according to this study, for the vast majority the result is higher pay, not unemployment. We also have laws that say employers cannot require their employees to perform sexual services for them, and who are we to decide that pretty teenagers who want to use sex for a career boost shouldn't be able to do so? Well, we're the majority apparently, so we have such laws. Even though I do not doubt there are a few people who wouldn't mind, most of us prefer having the protection of the law in this regard. And who are you to decide that we cannot have that option?Many of the people who would be taking such below-minimum-wage jobs would be middle-class highschool kids. They wouldn't be "kept" in such jobs, just like people earning minimum wage right now generally don't stay at minimum wage. And is it really more harmful to them to work at very low pay than to not work at all? Again, who are you to decide that they cannot have that option?
Correct.So you've posed what you may think is a more relevant question, but it is without a doubt NOT equivalent to, and not a restating of, his question.
I think you misunderstand me. For sure, there are losers in the short run, such as those people who will (temporarily) be out of a job because their jobs become marginally unprofitable. However, assume for a moment that I am correct in saying that raised minimum wages boost the overall economy. In that case, not raising the minimum wage would similarly bereave some people of the jobs they could have gotten, given a boosted economy. Whatever we do, there will of course be some people who are winners and some who are losers. But what I mean is that statistically, everyone is a winner - no matter what income group they belong to. Everyone's expected income will increase, everyone's chance of getting a job will also increase.Nonsense. There are damned few cases in economics where everybody wins, and this is most certainly not one of them. Hell, even the serious proponents of the minimum wage don't argue that: they only claim that the net benefit is worth the cost.
They do. Those responsibilities are in the law. As for other responsibilities, no, they don't. Their responsibility is to the shareholders. If the shareholders are not part of the communities where the corporations are based - and this is certainly something I would find regrettable - then they do not have such responsibilities, and we do ourselves no favour in fooling ourselves that they do.I'm not sure how a MW would fit in with this, but for God's sake, do these corporations have no responsibility to the communities where they're based?
*snip*
It costs to maintain a family. It costs to live. Employers are paying the CEOs salaries that are more and more outrageous, offering stock options that are incongruous with their performance on the job, while employees are getting hammered right and left. Unions are not doing their jobs, but how can they when manufacturers are willing to ship jobs overseas with little provocation? I'm not sure how a MW would fit in with this, but for God's sake, do these corporations have no responsibility to the communities where they're based?
Ah, good, somebody bit. Let me add a little to the criticisms others have made:Of course not. But I do believe that work that isn't worth $5.15/hour is not worth doing in a developed country like the US, and keeping people in such unproductive jobs is harmful for the economy as a whole. It is of course also harmful for the individuals.
Oh, that's easy to show: the benefit is political power.
I'm not totally opposed to certain exceptions for adolescents or such. That's more related to the fact that lots of people simply can't be bothered - understandably - to file taxes properly for just hiring the neighbor's kid to do something, which sort of creates an entryway into black labour.So if I hire Manuel's Lawn Care Service, the law dictates that Manuel pay Fernando and Raul $5.15 an hour to mow my lawn or rake my leaves, even if fifteen-year-old Stevie down the block would be willing to do the job for less.
Lack of wisdom is unfortunately not limited to the government. Additionally, just because it may be profitable for the employer, doesn't mean it is productive for the overall economy. It only means they got somebody to pay for what may well be unproductive work.Second, if an employee is truly "unproductive", a wise employer will make that employee an ex-employee. Unless the employee works for the government...![]()
That's not really true in practice. Lots of people are working well and hard without ever getting promoted, perhaps because the boss doesn't like them. There is also the incentive for an employer to keep someone who is doing well in doing what they currently do. For example, a person employing a burger flipper may not need another manager. Maybe the employer is the manager. Just because the burger flipper seems to learn fast and always flips burgers well, there's no guarantee they'll be good at something else. So better keep them flipping burgers indefinitely.Third, nobody is compelled to stay at an "unproductive" job, or even a minimum wage job. You don't even have to go to school. Just keep your eyes and ears open and learn something about the business you're working in, and you get promoted, even if you're flipping burgers at McDonald's or running a cash register at Wal-Mart.
The price of gas around here is about 65% taxes, what's your point? It's because of this thing called global warming, you see.Now comes the federal government, declaring, "Never mind what the market says the price of gas should be; the price of gas will henceforth be a minimum of $3.50 a gallon, until we decide it should be raised further."
There isn't any.What is the justification for treating wages any differently?