Exactly!
There are certain economic facts that people don't want to face these days. First of all, the job market for college grads is quickly becoming oversaturated. Education is a self-limiting solution - it can only work for so many people before the number of educated applicants devalues the degree.
I agree. Not all degrees are created equal and not all graduates with the same degree are created equal.
Second, we have lost milllions upon millions of middle class jobs in the recent recession and the jobs that are replacing them are largely low wage/service industry. That means displaced workers who already have families and mortgages and adult obligations left with no alternative to McJobs.
Many of these people are not improving their skills and are finding they can only get entry level jobs. Everybody needs to keep updating their job skill and not just be happy to press that button, not learn new programs that are not being used by their job or looking for a new path as soon as they see their job becoming obsolete, just to name a few.
And third, what we're seeing with the increasing number of people relying upon government assistance is a simply us subsidizing the success of
Walmart and McDonalds and other huge companies that horde their profits while letting the taxpayers provide for their employees.
I would rather have a person get off their butt and do a job and then the government supplement that income rather than just pay them to stay on their butt.
I also think many of the people ranting about the push to increase minimum wage are far, far removed from what is happening to wages for the working class. When I was in high school, fat food and retail jobs started around $7.50/hour. Those same jobs are paying the exact same wage today. Discussions of a living wage aside, there is absolutely no convincing argument that can be made, IMO, that would justify companies that post profits of tens or hundreds of millions of dollars per quarter not raising wages one thin dime in a decade and a half.
When I was in high school those jobs only paid minimum wage and not a cent more. No pay raises after working there for years. Maybe you are the one who was removed and got paid way more than most of the country paid. When you were a kid, Detroit was still booming and McDonald's needed to pay more since a starting job at GM was way more than that $7.50/hour.
It is a simple economic fact that 20 households earning 50K/year generate more economic activity and growth than a single household earning a million a year. We can't stimulate economic growth or jobs recovery by cutting taxes and spending less -businesses hire only when consumer demand justifies it, and consumer demand has a direct relationship to wages. Higher wages benefit us all, but to say that these days is political suicide. So we'll continue down our current path of high profits for a few and falling wages for the rest, increased reliance on welfare programs, stubbornly high unemployment, negative savings rates... and we'll blame it all on the poor, lazy people who didn't go to college without even one harsh word for the business owners who continue to demand that all gains in productivity and market share benefit only those at the top.