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kyleb
I'm making this thread based on a discussion in another which basically started https://www.physicsforums.com/showpost.php?p=2364140&postcount=175", and responding to the last post on the subject from that thread:
Cutting employees is far from the only way to cut expenditures, and if the business owner can't figure out a way to improve his bottom line to keep up with society, then I contend he should stand aside for someone who can provide desired products more efficiency. Worst comes to worst, he can sell the business off and get himself a minimum wage job working there or somewhere else.Jasongreat said:How about if a small business has 180 dollars a day for payroll, 3 workers at 6.00 /hr for 10 hrs. Then overnight the minimum wage increases to 7.00/hr, the company still only has the same monies available for payroll and can no longer afford the third person.
Yet the government has printed a lot of money since the last time minimum wage went up, so how can one be pro-working poor while make no attempt to adjust for that?Jasongreat said:To further complicate the issue, the buisiness needed all three workers to assemble enough product to meet payroll, so they decide to raise the price to retain the third worker(from here on we'll assume that the customers still choose to buy the more expensive product, or else the owner and the workers are done already). Since the increase was created by regulation instead of the free market, it is nothing more than inflating the value of the workers labor and in turn inflates the price of the product(government doesn't need to print money to inflate the currency). To compensate, every company as well as every individual that uses their products has to raise prices, and since the workers buy products from these companies(and individuals), they in essence have no more money than they started with(although they do get a bigger paycheck). By letting the market decide none of the workers jobs were ever in danger, and products stay cheaper(no inflation), so even with the smaller wage the workers can buy more with their money.
Surely you can see how putting the work into learning new skills and looking for a better paying job is made harder by living on a minimum wage set before we further diluted the value of our dollar? And what about those just entering the workforce to help their families or work though school? I get the impression you are thinking under laboratory conditions where there hasn't been wild inflation and there is a fixed workforce, rather than the real world situation we are in. Granted, I'm not in that situation personally, and haven't been in a long while, but out of empathy for those who are, I am so far at a loss to see how I could oppose increasing minimum wage and still rightly consider myself pro-working poor.Jasongreat said:One other way that not increasing the minimum wage helps the working class and poor is it does not artificially hold people to a job they should leave. If a persons wage can not support them its not the fault of the employer, its either time to learn some new skills so you can find a new job, to re-think your expenditures, or even the crazy notion of starting a buisness(where they might employ even more working class people and poor).
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