Golf4food
Male pirate last time I checked. Yep. Still male.
- Joined
- Feb 10, 2005
- Messages
- 8,175
eclectics said:Hardly mandatory by the employer though. Not trying to be cynical, but a worker's feeling of worth is most likely not on the top of the typical employer's worry list, unless you have a unusually nice boss.![]()
But it is a priority of Unions. When you jack up minimum wage too far, all Union jobs will immediately be in jeopardy from either immediate layoffs by the employers to compensate for their higher payroll expenses or potential hold-outs / strikes due to increased salary demands for the Union employees who are now making marginally less than they were prior to the wage increase.
It is very easy to say "Let's give everyone more money!" It is much more difficult to make it happen without causing harm to the greater economy of the country or the world.
Everything has a cause and effect. Yes, raising the minimum wage will possibly help people in the lower income levels have more cash, but they will also likely end up paying more money for many items and, in the end, might have LESS money in their pockets after their bills are paid and the groceries are bought and their cars are filled with gas. And THAT, my firends, is the crux of the problem. You can't just arbitrarily change one factor in the economy and assume everything else will stay the same.
Take gas prices as an example. When gas prices went up, did everything else stay the same? No. Airlines raise their rates. Cruise lines raise their rates. Shipping companies raise their rates. All of that means that suppliers who rely on shipping and air transportation raise their prices to compensate for their higher transportation costs. The wholesalers then pass on that extra cost to the retailers, who then have to pass the cost along to the consumers. In the end, gas goes up by $5 a barrell and you have to pay a dollar more per pound for your bananas at Publix than you did 6 months ago.
The same scenario will take place with a large hike in min. wage - only from the opposite direction. The restaurants and retailers will raise prices to compensate for their higher salary costs, then we all pay more money for things, then the businesses higher in the food chain have to raise prices to compensate, etc. and in the end the prices might go up even higher.
Miminum wage does not equal living wage. But a higher minimum wage will almost certainly equal a higher cost of living for everyone, including those we are trying to help. Sometimes in life (and economics) the seeming most simple solution is actually the one that will cause the most long term harm.
I'm not saying that the minimum wage doesn't deserve to be raised, but there has to be limits. It is not meant to be a living wage.