RamblingMad
I'm an 80s kid too.
- Joined
- Mar 29, 2019
- Messages
- 8,005
TL : DR the thread, but OP just highlights the problem with increasing the minimum wage to a living wage. When you are fresh out of high school or in college you are working part time and have a place to live. It may be a crowded dorm room or your parents house, but you don't have to make a "living" wage, and "back in my day" you didn't. I had health care through my parents and help with rent through college, where I worked a minimum wage job that paid a lot of, but not all of my expenses - and it was fine, great in fact. I had a lot more disposable income than my friends that chose not to work and lived off of student loans and their parents stipend.
Now, 2022, you rarely hear "minimum wage", its "living wage", and it's unrealistic. The more the part-time HS or college kid gets as a minimum wage, the more the cost of everything has to go up. The "living wage" then has to go up again, the prices go up again, and so on. The only way companies can keep from raising prices is to cut the wages that are not mandated. IOW, the experienced employees who are running the businesses and who really do need benefits and a living wage. The HS and college kids don't need a living wage or benefits but they get them anyway because it's mandated. now neither of them can even afford the product they are selling though because the price just went up to bring in enough income for both of them to be paid this new higher wage.
I hear you though, it should come out of the company profits. Yeah, except it never will. LSS? Be careful what you wish for when you go around demanding a "living wage" for everyone.
Company margins have been increasing for decades. Now, not all businesses have fat margins. But overall corporate margins having been going up, not staying steady.
