Wait, are you telling us the minimum wage creates jobs?
That's not what's happening. What's happening is that demand for the higher-wage jobs has increased--exactly as economics predicts.
Wait, are you telling us the minimum wage creates jobs?
Companies should be mandated to permit breaks and should be aggressively prosecuted for coercing, or encouraging employees to forego their breaks. However, the individual should remain free to work during the break should he/she want.
The same goes for gay porn, if someone is willing to do it, they should have that right. But, outside of working in the gay porn industry of course, an individual shouldn't be coerced into being in a gay porn simply because their boss might decide one day to make that a condition of employment. So far, I have seen no protection in the "free market" that would prevent such a situation.
If we all had magic wands we could wave, which could give us whatever we wanted, would you not agree that we'd all be very wealthy, even though no one would be paying anyone any money for anything?
Yes, because it frees up both capital and labor that can now be used on other things and generate even more wealth in the economy. Redundant busywork doesn't contribute anything.
So do I, and this is one of the reasons why increased minimum wages can be beneficial to the overall economy. If low wage jobs are replaced by machinery (because that gets relatively cheaper when the wage rises) then that can be a good thing. Of course, that presupposes that these workers can find something else to do which is more productive. Assuming that social and political forces will act in order to make use of the freed productive potential, this will happen.I agree with Shane here.
Who says you've got to choose?And it seems that millions of Americans would rather do a job as a manager than gay porn.
But that's completely contradictory! It's like you're saying that the employee gets to break the law and the employer doesn't!
Again, quitting? Just refusing to do it?
No. Sorry if it sounded that way. I don't know you personally, of course. I was just speaking generally.I think you are trying to pick a fight here that I won't give you. Money is not the most important thing in my life, nor do I recommend people stop pursuing their art or entertainment.
Claus was talking about stuff that he writes. Not just for himself, but for other people to read. If they want to read it, and they get to read it, then that's good. If he doesn't charge money to read it, that's even better, because then some people will get to read it who couldn't otherwise afford to.It's just that we are talking about an economy, and my personal pursuits don't contribute as much to that economy as do things like my labor that I see to a business to produce goods and services people pay for.
That's not what's happening.
Okay, then: why do you think a free market cannot exist?
They aren't.
They can demand shorter hours.
I think it's an insult to the millions of people who really were enslaved when someone equates a Wal-Mart employee with slavery.
How does one become subjugated to the economy?
That's not an answer.
It directly relates to the point at hand.
Quote:
A study released today by the Employment Policies Institute (EPI) reveals the increasing job losses that plague minorities and high school drop-outs following minimum wage hikes.
The research, conducted by Dr. David Neumark, economist at the University of California, Irvine, looks at the effects minimum wage hikes have had since the welfare reforms of the 1990s. The author focused specifically on the impact of minimum wage hikes on employment levels, wages, and income for teens and young adults.
The author found that for every 10% increase in the minimum wage:
Minority unemployment increased by 3.9% for workers between 16-24 y.o.
Hispanic unemployment increased by 4.9% ditto
Minority teen unemployment increased 6.6% ditto
African American teen unemployment increased by 8.4% ditto
Low-skilled unemployment (i.e., those lacking a high school diploma) increased by 8% ditto
want to help minimum wage earners?
STOP speculating on real estate pigs
get rid of homeowners associations which are made to solely increase real estate value
STOP thinking of homes as investments and start realizing that people need somewhere to LIVE!!!!!!!!!!!
Nice that you can afford 4 houses, but MUST you???
My city is becoming a ghost town, the poor and middle class are all moving into overpriced apartments because their homes are WAY out of their league pricewise now
greedy pigs abound, Im sure Ill be told off, but whatever
want to help minimum wage earners?
STOP speculating on real estate pigs
get rid of homeowners associations which are made to solely increase real estate value
STOP thinking of homes as investments and start realizing that people need somewhere to LIVE!!!!!!!!!!!
Nice that you can afford 4 houses, but MUST you???
My city is becoming a ghost town, the poor and middle class are all moving into overpriced apartments because their homes are WAY out of their league pricewise now
greedy pigs abound, Im sure Ill be told off, but whatever
Claus was talking about stuff that he writes. Not just for himself, but for other people to read. If they want to read it, and they get to read it, then that's good. If he doesn't charge money to read it, that's even better, because then some people will get to read it who couldn't otherwise afford to.
The problem with the study is that it ignores nearly 50% of the MW earning population. There should be emphasis that this study is 16 to 24 year olds. After reading the entire report, I'm not sure why they left off the million persons who don't fit into that category. That's a huge number.
Now, it's possible that the study was written or commissioned to specifically address the claims by people who insist that it is precisely this group who are helped by increases in the MW, but it's equally possible that the older workers are more skilled/educated (this is implied in the study but not documented) and thus not effected.
I'd also like to see some of the famed trickle-down economy folks comment on the trickle up effect. Does anyone presume that MW earners are not going to be spending their increased salaries in the community on goods and services?
Even allowing for an average (temporary, as in one year) DECREASE in the number of MW earners at an astronomical 4%* (averaging the impact on minorities as mentioned in the study), the net effect of the proposed increase is an injection of roughly 2.0 billion USD into the economy.
Further, examination of MW earners in the last quarter century shows that the overall number of MW earners did not consistently decrease in the year of or year after an increase. This would seem to negate the contention in the OP.
The tendency seems to be more related to the economy as a whole, not to the marginal hourly increase of the lowest tier of the economy. Ergo the asterisked comment above that I was allowing for an "astronomical 4%" in the mentioned added cash to the service economy. The actual figure for the overall decrease in the few years that it has occurred is actually less than 1%.
Ergo, what is the purpose of the study, and its purpose in singling out the statistically significant sampling only?
This is why I don't talk to it. Anything that accuses someone of lying about whether a browser works because they's a librul and must be lying about everything isn't worth the time to talk to.you don't have a solution, you have dogma
I got a feeling you're talking about something important here. Can you elaborate or post a story about the phenomenon you're describing?
Try coherence, it is a virtue.
DR
Seems to me, that's what the study was about- and that was quite clear.
Did you read the study cited in the OP? It does not say that. Several posters in this thread assume that, but the study merely covers statistics in the groups cited. The full study also indicates that there are other key minority segments that actually benefit from MW increases.I'm not sure you're reading it right- these jobs do not simply get reassigned to older or more skilled people: they get abandoned, or merged with the already higher paid jobs. One person starts doing 2 jobs.
Where do you get the assumption that the costs for goods and services will go up by 2.0 billion dollars in the first year of an increase in the MW. That's a very lowball under-estimation of the amount of additional earnings those 2.1 million people working at or below MW would get under the proposed increases. And the lowest end wage-earners aren't going to be investing in stock portfolios. They're going to be buying better food, furniture, etc.... In short, pumping money back into the economy.Goods and services that are now more expensive? How does that trickle up?
It's not invented, it's paid out in wages. Multiply 2.1 million workers times the amount of the increase, which is rather large this go-round, and deduct a suitable number (allowing for the survey cited in the OP) who will lose their jobs, and you still get a net increase in the billions. (Yes, billions.)Money just gets invented? From what?
As you wish. http://www.bls.gov/cps/minwage2003tbls.htmNo, I don't think it does- but I'd like to see your analysis on this.
It's a decrease in only the highlighted minority categories mentioned in the OP. As mentioned, the full study actually mentions differing effects in certain sub-sets of that same 16-24 y.o. group.I'm not quite sure I follow- but it's a decrease, right? If the claim of proponents of MW is that it creates wealth, creates jobs, etc- a decrease is a decrease.
I'm not quite sure why you're confused?