REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS

Minimum Wage

POSTED BY: TRIXY
UPDATED: Tuesday, December 16, 2014 12:48
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Tuesday, November 11, 2014 3:01 PM

JO753

rezident owtsidr


How much we pay for stuf iz more than just how much the real workerz get paid to make it.

If you look at where all the money haz ended up and wonder how it got there, the cost breakdown uv the stuf we buy iz a good place to start.

----------------------------
DUZ XaT SEM RiT TQ YQ? - Jubal Early

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Tuesday, November 11, 2014 3:05 PM

JO753

rezident owtsidr


Quote:

Originally posted by Jongsstraw:
When the new Congress starts in January they ought to make a deal with Obama, trading a reasonable minimum wage increase for Keystone Pipeline approval. That's a good way to start 2015.



Now I get it! The Republicanz are Canadian infiltratorz!

----------------------------
DUZ XaT SEM RiT TQ YQ? - Jubal Early

http://www.nooalf.com

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Friday, November 14, 2014 9:27 AM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Quote:

Originally posted by Trixy:
Quote:

Originally posted by AURaptor:
Quote:

Originally posted by Trixy:

Please enlighten me on how giving extra money to consumers while being completely in line with inflation will cost thousands of jobs....




First of all, it's not the Govt's money to GIVE. It's the businesses which employ the individuals. If the govt truly wants to give folks back some of THEIR money, then they should lower taxes.

Oh, those making only min wage don't PAY any effective Federal income tax. In fact, they GET money, from others, via the " EIC ", aka $ transfer, from those who have, to those who don't.

But this topic has veered wildly off the thread topic. We can pick up this matter elsewhere, if you like.

Again, welcome to FFF.Net.




Good idea! It felt odd posting in an internet topic on this matter!

Managing minimum wage is an essential part of keeping the economy healthy. The government messing with it is no different than the government adjusting interest rates.

Also, I just don't seem to get where you are coming through. Here you are, mention EIC, which is a form of welfare- the VERY SAME SYSTEM that is encouraged by having a minimum wage that is below a living standard. Additionally, as someone who actually has had to work through college, I can assure you that I'm not getting any help from the government in the for of welfare, food stamps, or other aid.

You seem to place workers of minimum wage jobs in a separate category from the rest of society- which boggles me as we all have had to start somewhere. We are talking about 28 million people benefiting from the wage raises. Raising minimum wage isn't going to encourage people to hold that same low-level job for the rest of their life. However, it might just encourage those who are unemployed to grab a job in-between looking for another career, as the job (with a living minimum wage) would be worth more than unemployment pay is.....

Raising wages encourages consumer spending, employment, and wealth promotion; the last part being especially important given the disappearance of the middle class and the growing wealth gap.

Finally, it isn't like the government in passing a wage raise would be hunting down small businesses. As surveys have shown that the majority of small businesses not only support a raise in minimum wages, but already tend to employ higher wages in order to encourage workers away from corporations in the first place. In other words, for the vast majority of places, it would be business as usual.



Hi Trixy,

I do agree, very much, that managing minimum wage is a very important part of keeping the economy healthy. Just raising it all willy-nilly is not good management, in my opinion. It occurs to me that I don't actually know what your stance or ideas on the subject are so please don't feel that I'm arguing with you. I'm just saying that it doesn't matter right now if minimum wage was $5.00/hr or $5,000.00/hr. If you're making minimum wage, you can't afford to shop where you work. Period.

I never really felt the EIC was a form of welfare before because whenever I claimed it for myself it was just a small tax credit, being a single guy with no kids. I have no doubt about it now that I see what poverty workers with kids get for EIC. I work with two women who have 4 kids and they more than double their take-home pay with a HUGE "refund" check in April. How do you suppose that feels for a guy like me. I know that these women would be completely unable to raise those children, and god knows their life is very tough even with $12,000 of refund money...... but my take home pay after taxes (which I still have to pay some at poverty level) is just over $10,000. They make that $10,000 as well, and not to insult them, but I easily do more work myself than the both of them do combined on any given night.

Minimum wage, especially in the last 5 or 10 years, is not a starting point for a lot of people. If you included the 6 weeks of paid vacation, the company match and profit sharing and the bonuses I got at my last job I might have actually been grossing $70,000 a year. I was laid off in December of 2009. I've worked two part time jobs for barely over minimum wage since that time and I've had this one for over 2 1/2 years now.


Honestly, if you want to help the poor people, there should be Meaningful government subsidies on Gasoline prices.

Think about it.... Back in 1996 at my first job, I was making $5.25 an hour minimum wage. It doesn't sound like much, but I was able to buy 5 gallons of gas with that. Not only that, but do you remember how cheap the price of everything except for new technology was back when gas was that cheap?

I'm in a unique position where I can make ends meet and even save a bit with my minimum wage job today. I understand that I am an army of one and that I could never expect anybody else to live like I do now or to have cut back and save so much when I did have a good job. What I can say though is that if the price of gas rose in exact parallel from when I was at that first job until today, the average price of gas wouldn't be a penny over $1.40 a gallon today and virtually everything else would more resemble late 90's prices than they do prices in 2014.

I guess what I'm saying is that if the government were to subsidize say 30% of gas prices for consumers (regular and unleaded) and 50% of gas prices for business (diesel).... Not only would I be able to live and save off of minimum wage today, I'd be thriving. ;)



I have to disagree about the minimum wage hike hurting small businesses.

My parents have a furniture restoration business that was thriving until around 2010. They have loyal customers, and even have done quite a bit of work for a 70's rock star who shall remain nameless. They work hard, and I love the hell out of them, but I think the one thing they were always lacking was the Business Sense. This wasn't a big deal when times were good and there was more money being thrown around. Today though, they've put a lot of their personal stuff into the business to keep it afloat. They don't know what they're going to do about the new minimum wage law saying that they have to pay somebody $10.00/hr in their state. They only have one employee and he's not even full time. That's how serious it is for them.

Not saying that this is all small business by any measure, but this seriously will hurt my parents. I'm not even in a position right now to help them with my own minimum wage job. I can't even think about helping them right now by working for them since their business is an hour drive away and my 1996 car is kind of falling apart.



Forget a minimum wage increase. The increased prices of good for everyone will nullify it. The poor people will be paying the same percentage of their income to by the same goods and the people with money would just be paying more and be pissed at the poor people for it.

I seriously think that large government subsidies for consumers as well as business on gasoline prices will fix everything.

That needs to be rigorously followed up by our government to make sure that prices of goods go down accordingly to make it worth the effort.


I'd love to hear back from you and your opinions. ;)


Do Right, Be Right. :)

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Friday, November 14, 2014 12:48 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Quote:

Originally posted by JO753:
Now I get it! The Republicanz are Canadian infiltratorz!
http://www.nooalf.com]

That would have been just as equally funny to me if both of the "z"'s were replaced with more conservative "s'sssisssssusss"




I hope nobody fucks up New Zealand before I figure out how to hurdle their barriers for newcomers....



Do Right, Be Right. :)

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Friday, November 14, 2014 4:53 PM

JEWELSTAITEFAN


Quote:

Originally posted by Magonsdaughter:
Quote:

Originally posted by JEWELSTAITEFAN:

Interesting. Some confusion arises when discussing American minimum wage then, because your minimum wage differs. Yours has a career minimum wage, a profession minimum wage. In America, the minimum wage is that which is broad-based, non-career wage, non-specified for each profession. Minimum wage here is NOT FOR professions, or professionals, it is for those not pursuing a profession, not interested in remaining in a profession, for the in-between jobs, the part-time jobs, the "starter" jobs.



Yes, the minimum wage applies there as well. Minimum wage applies to starter jobs, to non professional jobs. Dishwashers, cleaners, burger flippers etc

http://www.smh.com.au/national/minimum-wage-up-3-per-cent-rise-of-1870
-a-week-20140604-39is5.html


Can you tell us the difference in minimum wages from burger flipper, to say, warehouse worker? Looks like burger flippers are about $16.87 per hour, but the other data I did not find in that link you provided. What is min wage for a receptionist? Retail clerk? Construction worker? Bus Driver?

You also say the minimum wage refers to starter jobs, non-career jobs. These would be jobs that everybody knows are not "living wage" jobs, right? Spending an entire lifetime in one of these jobs is not feasible, right? And is not intended to be. Why would you expect a teenager living at home, with mommy and daddy paying all the grocery costs, fuel costs, insurance, room and board to be making a "living wage" when there is no expenses for them to pay?

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Friday, November 14, 2014 5:04 PM

JEWELSTAITEFAN


Quote:

Originally posted by JO753:
How much we pay for stuf iz more than just how much the real workerz get paid to make it.

If you look at where all the money haz ended up and wonder how it got there, the cost breakdown uv the stuf we buy iz a good place to start.


The price of goods at a place like restaurant is expected to be about 3 times the cost of the labor "cost" - so if you increase the wages $3/hr, the cost of the food should go up $9/hr of labor needed. This way, the worker will need to work 4 hours more to be able to afford, after taxes, the food they are serving.

The costs to the employer are 21% plus benefits. So if the "wage" is $10/hr, the cost of employing the employee is $12.10 per hour, not including any benefits. This usually means for most employees, the cost to the employer is near $20/hr. So your $3 burger is not going to be a dime more expensive if the wage increases $3/hr, it will be closer to $4 unless the employee count is reduced, because most customers will not be able to pay the freight for the mopre expensive meal. And the fries, drink, desert will also cost more, the same increase.

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Friday, November 14, 2014 5:42 PM

JEWELSTAITEFAN


I thought you didn't discuss this stuff.
Quote:

Originally posted by 6IXSTRINGJACK:
Quote:

Originally posted by Trixy:
Quote:

Originally posted by AURaptor:
First of all, it's not the Govt's money to GIVE. It's the businesses which employ the individuals. If the govt truly wants to give folks back some of THEIR money, then they should lower taxes.


You seem to place workers of minimum wage jobs in a separate category from the rest of society- which boggles me as we all have had to start somewhere. We are talking about 28 million people benefiting from the wage raises. Raising minimum wage isn't going to encourage people to hold that same low-level job for the rest of their life. However, it might just encourage those who are unemployed to grab a job in-between looking for another career, as the job (with a living minimum wage) would be worth more than unemployment pay is.....

Finally, it isn't like the government in passing a wage raise would be hunting down small businesses. As surveys have shown that the majority of small businesses not only support a raise in minimum wages, but already tend to employ higher wages in order to encourage workers away from corporations in the first place. In other words, for the vast majority of places, it would be business as usual.


Hi Trixy,

I do agree, very much, that managing minimum wage is a very important part of keeping the economy healthy. Just raising it all willy-nilly is not good management, in my opinion.

I never really felt the EIC was a form of welfare before because whenever I claimed it for myself it was just a small tax credit, being a single guy with no kids. I have no doubt about it now that I see what poverty workers with kids get for EIC. I work with two women who have 4 kids and they more than double their take-home pay with a HUGE "refund" check in April. How do you suppose that feels for a guy like me. I know that these women would be completely unable to raise those children, and god knows their life is very tough even with $12,000 of refund money...... but my take home pay after taxes (which I still have to pay some at poverty level) is just over $10,000. They make that $10,000 as well, and not to insult them, but I easily do more work myself than the both of them do combined on any given night.

Minimum wage, especially in the last 5 or 10 years, is not a starting point for a lot of people. If you included the 6 weeks of paid vacation, the company match and profit sharing and the bonuses I got at my last job I might have actually been grossing $70,000 a year. I was laid off in December of 2009. I've worked two part time jobs for barely over minimum wage since that time and I've had this one for over 2 1/2 years now.



Think about it.... Back in 1996 at my first job, I was making $5.25 an hour minimum wage. It doesn't sound like much, but I was able to buy 5 gallons of gas with that. Not only that, but do you remember how cheap the price of everything except for new technology was back when gas was that cheap?


Are you saying that, after taxes, your $4 could buy 5 gallons? You say the price of gas was $.80 per gallon? In 1996?
Quote:


I'm in a unique position where I can make ends meet and even save a bit with my minimum wage job today. What I can say though is that if the price of gas rose in exact parallel from when I was at that first job until today, the average price of gas wouldn't be a penny over $1.40 a gallon today and virtually everything else would more resemble late 90's prices than they do prices in 2014.


The problem is that the minimum wage has risen, to reduce your buying power. The min wage then was $4.25/hr, and now it has almost doubled. So the costs of goods and services is now almost doubled, but your take home pay has not. The increase in minimum wage is a large culprit.
Quote:


I guess what I'm saying is that if the government were to subsidize say 30% of gas prices for consumers (regular and unleaded) and 50% of gas prices for business (diesel).... Not only would I be able to live and save off of minimum wage today, I'd be thriving. ;)


I have to disagree about the minimum wage hike hurting small businesses.

My parents have a furniture restoration business that was thriving until around 2010. They don't know what they're going to do about the new minimum wage law saying that they have to pay somebody $10.00/hr in their state. They only have one employee and he's not even full time. That's how serious it is for them.

Not saying that this is all small business by any measure, but this seriously will hurt my parents.


Are you arguing that the min wage increase WILL hurt small businesses, or WILL NOT hurt? Your above statements seem conflicting, or unclear.
Quote:


Forget a minimum wage increase. The increased prices of good for everyone will nullify it.


Very perceptive.
Quote:


The poor people will be paying the same percentage of their income to by the same goods and the people with money would just be paying more and be pissed at the poor people for it.


No, the poor will be buying less because a greater percentage of their "take home" pay will be needed to purchase the same goods, and those with money will be buying less, and only spending more when large deals present, like "Going Out Of Business" sales.
Quote:


That needs to be rigorously followed up by our government to make sure that prices of goods go down accordingly to make it worth the effort.


Government control of prices? Because the government does such a good job of managing the economy and price controlling.

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Friday, November 14, 2014 11:32 PM

JO753

rezident owtsidr


Quote:

Originally posted by JEWELSTAITEFAN:
The price of goods at a place like restaurant is expected to be about 3 times the cost of the labor "cost" - so if you increase the wages $3/hr, etc etc etc. same old arguments



You missed my point.

More billionaires and millionaires than ever before. More poor peepl than ever befor. Almost everybody in between seeing their income dropping.

Why iz that?

----------------------------
DUZ XaT SEM RiT TQ YQ? - Jubal Early

http://www.nooalf.com

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Friday, November 14, 2014 11:35 PM

JO753

rezident owtsidr


6 string - Where do you think the money for the subsidiez woud come from?

Plus, the oil & gas industriez are already subsidized in a dozen different wayz.

----------------------------
DUZ XaT SEM RiT TQ YQ? - Jubal Early

http://www.nooalf.com

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Sunday, November 16, 2014 3:47 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.



Quote:

First of all, it's not the Govt's money to GIVE. It's the businesses which employ the individuals.
Yes, actually, it is. The government prints the money and supports its value. It IS truly government money.

Quote:

I do agree, very much, that managing minimum wage is a very important part of keeping the economy healthy. Just raising it all willy-nilly is not good management, in my opinion.

I never really felt the EIC was a form of welfare before because whenever I claimed it for myself it was just a small tax credit, being a single guy with no kids. I have no doubt about it now that I see what poverty workers with kids get for EIC. I work with two women who have 4 kids and they more than double their take-home pay with a HUGE "refund" check in April. How do you suppose that feels for a guy like me. I know that these women would be completely unable to raise those children, and god knows their life is very tough even with $12,000 of refund money...... but my take home pay after taxes (which I still have to pay some at poverty level) is just over $10,000. They make that $10,000 as well, and not to insult them, but I easily do more work myself than the both of them do combined on any given night.

Minimum wage, especially in the last 5 or 10 years, is not a starting point for a lot of people. If you included the 6 weeks of paid vacation, the company match and profit sharing and the bonuses I got at my last job I might have actually been grossing $70,000 a year. I was laid off in December of 2009. I've worked two part time jobs for barely over minimum wage since that time and I've had this one for over 2 1/2 years now.

I have no idea what the boils down to. At the same time that you say you don't feel that the EIC is welfare, you seem pretty resentful of some who get more than you.

Quote:

The problem is that the minimum wage has risen, to reduce your buying power. The min wage then was $4.25/hr, and now it has almost doubled. So the costs of goods and services is now almost doubled, but your take home pay has not. The increase in minimum wage is a large culprit.
All I'm getting out of this is that the minimum wage hasn't increased in keeping with the cost of living. But everybody knows that!

Quote:

My parents have a furniture restoration business that was thriving until around 2010. They don't know what they're going to do about the new minimum wage law saying that they have to pay somebody $10.00/hr in their state. They only have one employee and he's not even full time. That's how serious it is for them.
They'll have to raise their prices. The reason why that shouldn't be too much of an issue is that everyone will have to raise their prices just the same, so no particular business will suffer a competitive disadvantage.

Quote:

No, the poor will be buying less because a greater percentage of their "take home" pay will be needed to purchase the same goods, and those with money will be buying less, and only spending more when large deals present, like "Going Out Of Business" sales.


That lasts only as long as it takes production to ramp up to meet increased demand.

If you want to improve "the economy", you have to increase your customer base... by making sure that people have MONEY TO BUY. The genesis of the Great Depression was because too many people didn't have money to buy goods and services. That tossed people out of work, which caused even LESS money to be available for buying goods and services, which tossed even MORE people out of work.

But since manufacturing in the USA has been mostly offshored, if you want to improve the jobs situation in the USA, you have to raise protective tariffs on imported goods to give manufacturing a chance to revive. This isn't rocket science.

In any case, studies have shown that a rise in the minimum wage doesn't decrease the number of available jobs, and in some cases actually increased the availability of work since more people were getting more money, they could afford to go out and buy more things, like restaurant food etc.

--------------
You can't build a nation with bombs. You can't create a society with guns.

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Monday, November 17, 2014 4:12 PM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


Quote:

Originally posted by JEWELSTAITEFAN:


Can you tell us the difference in minimum wages from burger flipper, to say, warehouse worker? Looks like burger flippers are about $16.87 per hour, but the other data I did not find in that link you provided. What is min wage for a receptionist? Retail clerk? Construction worker? Bus Driver?



I dont know. Do you want me to trawl through 10 different awards to find information that you can find as easily as me because I dont keep that information in my head, not working in those industries.

Quote:


You also say the minimum wage refers to starter jobs, non-career jobs. These would be jobs that everybody knows are not "living wage" jobs, right? Spending an entire lifetime in one of these jobs is not feasible, right? And is not intended to be. Why would you expect a teenager living at home, with mommy and daddy paying all the grocery costs, fuel costs, insurance, room and board to be making a "living wage" when there is no expenses for them to pay?



You make a lot of assumptions here, buddy. Not everyone doing base level jobs are living at home with mummy and daddy while studying at night to become an accountant or whatever fantasy you have about how everyone lives. Not everyone has a mummy and daddy to support them. Some people have no supports, have to do it on their own, have families to support, have rent to pay and take what they are able to do. Life kicks out a variety of circumstances that people have to contend with. Some move on to better paid jobs, some stay in low paid jobs all there life. In the rarified air you clearly breathe, have you never met the 60 year old cleaner or factory worker or taxi driver or ditch digger who has always worked in those kind of jobs. And had a family, paid rent/mortgage.

So you have some fantasy about how it should be in a perfect world, with everyone dragging themselves up by the bootstraps and working numerous jobs. But the issue is that employers shouldn't treat people like slaves. If you put in work, any work, you deserve to be paid a reasonable wage. Businesses can and do factor that in to their overheads. If you can't afford to pay the wage, your business clearly cannot afford the employee.

And once again, a minimum wage does not prevent or deter people from bettering themselves. People do what they are capable of. Paying people shitty wages is one major contributor to the cycle of poverty. It's a kind of modern feudalism.

http://theprogressivecynic.com/2014/05/13/neo-feudalism-captures-the-u
nited-states
/
Quote:

The American serfdom suffers under wage stagnation, cuts in social services, an epidemic of joblessness, and a complete lack of influence on their “elected” officials. A vast majority of the American people is stuck just making ends meet and putting food on the table, while their employers take all of the gains of their productivity. In many cases, these neo-serfs are stuck in crippling debt and have no job mobility, thus are as stuck as any share-cropper or indentured serf in the past.



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Monday, November 17, 2014 4:39 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


You know, the right wingers detest Mao for (among other tings) removing wages and putting everyone on the same system of work-credits, whether or not they were old, disabled, or ill. It truly was a case of 'work or die'. And yet, here they are, advocating something even worse. Because they want pay to be exactly whatever the business is inclined to provide. So business can be exactly like a Marianas Islands sweatshop or a Mexican maquiladora, where even children 'get' to work for less wages than the cost of the food they need to buy.

Let's hear it for business rights and benefit!




SAGAN: We are releasing vast quantities of carbon dioxide, increasing the greenhouse effect. It may not take much to destabilize the Earth's climate, to convert this heaven, our only home in the cosmos, into a kind of hell.

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Monday, November 17, 2014 4:51 PM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


It really is about the fantasy that free enterprise will magically make things work out for the best if left to its own devices. The magic of the market. The trouble is that the market has no moral compass, as we see time and time again. If it works for a business to employ child labour in Bangladesh, well folks, let market forces sort it out. If it works for business to take advantage of a global financial crash to pay pittance for workers who then use welfare to top up their earnings so they can put food on the table, well that's the market (not afraid to rip off government when government is too stupid not to notice).

Dont worry, it'll all work out in the end. Little Todd will work three jobs to put himself through medical school, while his ol Ma mends clothes all day long in the basement where they both live and little Todd's long lost Pa will find his way home in the snow just in time for Christmas just as Todd graduates and there;ll be bells and singing. JUST LIKE IN THE MOVIES.

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Monday, November 17, 2014 8:17 PM

JEWELSTAITEFAN


Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:

Quote:

First of all, it's not the Govt's money to GIVE. It's the businesses which employ the individuals.
Yes, actually, it is. The government prints the money and supports its value. It IS truly government money.

Quote:

I do agree, very much, that managing minimum wage is a very important part of keeping the economy healthy. Just raising it all willy-nilly is not good management, in my opinion.

I never really felt the EIC was a form of welfare before because whenever I claimed it for myself it was just a small tax credit, being a single guy with no kids. I have no doubt about it now that I see what poverty workers with kids get for EIC. I work with two women who have 4 kids and they more than double their take-home pay with a HUGE "refund" check in April. How do you suppose that feels for a guy like me. I know that these women would be completely unable to raise those children, and god knows their life is very tough even with $12,000 of refund money...... but my take home pay after taxes (which I still have to pay some at poverty level) is just over $10,000. They make that $10,000 as well, and not to insult them, but I easily do more work myself than the both of them do combined on any given night.

Minimum wage, especially in the last 5 or 10 years, is not a starting point for a lot of people. If you included the 6 weeks of paid vacation, the company match and profit sharing and the bonuses I got at my last job I might have actually been grossing $70,000 a year. I was laid off in December of 2009. I've worked two part time jobs for barely over minimum wage since that time and I've had this one for over 2 1/2 years now.

I have no idea what the boils down to. At the same time that you say you don't feel that the EIC is welfare, you seem pretty resentful of some who get more than you.

Quote:

The problem is that the minimum wage has risen, to reduce your buying power. The min wage then was $4.25/hr, and now it has almost doubled. So the costs of goods and services is now almost doubled, but your take home pay has not. The increase in minimum wage is a large culprit.
All I'm getting out of this is that the minimum wage hasn't increased in keeping with the cost of living. But everybody knows that!

Quote:

My parents have a furniture restoration business that was thriving until around 2010. They don't know what they're going to do about the new minimum wage law saying that they have to pay somebody $10.00/hr in their state. They only have one employee and he's not even full time. That's how serious it is for them.
They'll have to raise their prices. The reason why that shouldn't be too much of an issue is that everyone will have to raise their prices just the same, so no particular business will suffer a competitive disadvantage.

Quote:

No, the poor will be buying less because a greater percentage of their "take home" pay will be needed to purchase the same goods, and those with money will be buying less, and only spending more when large deals present, like "Going Out Of Business" sales.


That lasts only as long as it takes production to ramp up to meet increased demand.

If you want to improve "the economy", you have to increase your customer base... by making sure that people have MONEY TO BUY. The genesis of the Great Depression was because too many people didn't have money to buy goods and services. That tossed people out of work, which caused even LESS money to be available for buying goods and services, which tossed even MORE people out of work.

But since manufacturing in the USA has been mostly offshored, if you want to improve the jobs situation in the USA, you have to raise protective tariffs on imported goods to give manufacturing a chance to revive. This isn't rocket science.

In any case, studies have shown that a rise in the minimum wage doesn't decrease the number of available jobs, and in some cases actually increased the availability of work since more people were getting more money, they could afford to go out and buy more things, like restaurant food etc.


Maybe he thinks that, in this global economy, the minimum wage will be raised to more than 2 cents per day, and then the products made in China will no longer be profitably made there. Will 3 cents per day be enough pay? Or should lazy Americans further demand their pay be increased so they become even less profitable?

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Monday, November 17, 2014 8:22 PM

JEWELSTAITEFAN


Quote:

Originally posted by Magonsdaughter:
Quote:

Originally posted by JEWELSTAITEFAN:


Can you tell us the difference in minimum wages from burger flipper, to say, warehouse worker? Looks like burger flippers are about $16.87 per hour, but the other data I did not find in that link you provided. What is min wage for a receptionist? Retail clerk? Construction worker? Bus Driver?



I dont know. Do you want me to trawl through 10 different awards to find information that you can find as easily as me because I dont keep that information in my head, not working in those industries.


Do you refer to awards as a term for pay?
Quote:

Quote:


You also say the minimum wage refers to starter jobs, non-career jobs. These would be jobs that everybody knows are not "living wage" jobs, right? Spending an entire lifetime in one of these jobs is not feasible, right? And is not intended to be. Why would you expect a teenager living at home, with mommy and daddy paying all the grocery costs, fuel costs, insurance, room and board to be making a "living wage" when there is no expenses for them to pay?



You make a lot of assumptions here, buddy. Not everyone doing base level jobs are living at home with mummy and daddy while studying at night to become an accountant or whatever fantasy you have about how everyone lives.


No, not making assumptions. Asking questions. What do you call the pay level for those not earning "living wage" or not working to support a family, those with nothing to support nor fiscal responsibilities? What is that level of pay called?
Quote:


Not everyone has a mummy and daddy to support them. Some people have no supports, have to do it on their own, have families to support, have rent to pay and take what they are able to do. Life kicks out a variety of circumstances that people have to contend with. Some move on to better paid jobs, some stay in low paid jobs all there life. In the rarified air you clearly breathe, have you never met the 60 year old cleaner or factory worker or taxi driver or ditch digger who has always worked in those kind of jobs. And had a family, paid rent/mortgage.

So you have some fantasy about how it should be in a perfect world, with everyone dragging themselves up by the bootstraps and working numerous jobs. But the issue is that employers shouldn't treat people like slaves. If you put in work, any work, you deserve to be paid a reasonable wage. Businesses can and do factor that in to their overheads. If you can't afford to pay the wage, your business clearly cannot afford the employee.

And once again, a minimum wage does not prevent or deter people from bettering themselves. People do what they are capable of. Paying people shitty wages is one major contributor to the cycle of poverty. It's a kind of modern feudalism.

http://theprogressivecynic.com/2014/05/13/neo-feudalism-captures-the-u
nited-states
/
Quote:

The American serfdom suffers under wage stagnation, cuts in social services, an epidemic of joblessness, and a complete lack of influence on their “elected” officials. A vast majority of the American people is stuck just making ends meet and putting food on the table, while their employers take all of the gains of their productivity. In many cases, these neo-serfs are stuck in crippling debt and have no job mobility, thus are as stuck as any share-cropper or indentured serf in the past.




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Monday, November 17, 2014 8:36 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


No, not making assumptions. Asking questions. What do you call the pay level for those not earning "living wage" or not working to support a family, those with nothing to support nor fiscal responsibilities? What is that level of pay called?


6-string wage




SAGAN: We are releasing vast quantities of carbon dioxide, increasing the greenhouse effect. It may not take much to destabilize the Earth's climate, to convert this heaven, our only home in the cosmos, into a kind of hell.

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Monday, November 17, 2014 9:00 PM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


[

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Monday, November 17, 2014 9:03 PM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


Quote:

Originally posted by JEWELSTAITEFAN:

Do you refer to awards as a term for pay?



Awards are industry pay rates.


Quote:

No, not making assumptions. Asking questions. What do you call the pay level for those not earning "living wage" or not working to support a family, those with nothing to support nor fiscal responsibilities? What is that level of pay called?



I don't call it anything. And frankly I have no idea of what relevance it is to the discussion. What's your point? I'm struggling to find the purpose of your questions.

Junior rates apply to the under 21, but if you are over, assumptions can't be made about what someone's responsibilities are, surely. Although god knows how things work in the US. Do you get asked if you have a family to support before your rate of pay is set?




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Monday, November 17, 2014 10:18 PM

JO753

rezident owtsidr


I dont think I'v ever herd a GoP talking about lowering the % the investorz take out uv a bizness. Its often way more than the labor cost and coud be going to a single person.

1 alredy rich guy who happened to hear that a startup wuz in desperate need uv cash gets to hog up more money than hundredz or thouzandz uv peepl doing the real work.

----------------------------
DUZ XaT SEM RiT TQ YQ? - Jubal Early

http://www.nooalf.com

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Tuesday, November 18, 2014 12:30 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


It's hard for me to post the whole thing and read it again JSF, so I'm just going to answer your questions, if you please ;)


Q: Are you saying that, after taxes, your $4 could buy 5 gallons? You say the price of gas was $.80 per gallon? In 1996?

A: Yes... in 1997-1998, actually. At least by me it was. Actually, I remember car-pooling with my friends to buy smokes in Indiana and not even charging them anything. It was just a fun road trip. Back in late 199-Whatever it was, I was able to buy gas in Indiana for 76 cents a gallon and we'd be able to buy cartons of Marlboro smokes for 14 bucks plus tax.

Q: The problem is that the minimum wage has risen, to reduce your buying power. The min wage then was $4.25/hr, and now it has almost doubled. So the costs of goods and services is now almost doubled, but your take home pay has not. The increase in minimum wage is a large culprit.

A: I'm not exactly following this.

What I'm saying is that with Gasoline being the Largest barrier of entry into any business, I feel that it has risen in MAD proportions compared to Minimum Wage.

What I'm saying is that when I was 17 at my first job I could buy 4-5 gallons with my minimum wage. After taxes today, I barely get 2 gallons of gas for the same hours worth of work. (Ironically, although I've never been a bad worker, I'm like Insanely good at what I do today, so I feel I'm making even that much less because I'm twice the worker I was when I was 17)

Bottom line, the costs of goods has doubled today since only the early to mid 2000's.

I don't know about you, but I've always saved all of my reciepts. (I know, crazy right?).

I'll show you a ton of proof that prices on ordinary "neccity type goods" have nearly quadrupled since the late 90's. It's easy to miss that when the price of technology is always falling the other way at an equal pace. ;)

Q: Are you arguing that the min wage increase WILL hurt small businesses, or WILL NOT hurt? Your above statements seem conflicting, or unclear.

A: I know it will hurt my parent's business. I have to believe that it will hurt a lot of people's parents businesses. My parents aren't the only "stupid" ones out there that thought the Money Tree was going to rain down forever.

Unfortunately my parents never had a team of lawyers on retainer like GE so they could just 6Sigma their way out of this one......


Q: [Well, maybe not a question, but an awesome statement nonetheless... ;)] Very perceptive.

A: Whether you're making 5 bucks an our or 5 million bucks an hour at Minimum Wage, you still can't afford to shop where you work ;)

STATEMENT: No, the poor will be buying less because a greater percentage of their "take home" pay will be needed to purchase the same goods, and those with money will be buying less, and only spending more when large deals present, like "Going Out Of Business" sales.

A: I agree totally. They'll be spending "more" as an amount, but yada, yada, yada.....

Ask me again why we're even arguing about anything since you're just repeating back to me things I've been saying! :)

STATEMENT: Government control of prices? Because the government does such a good job of managing the economy and price controlling.

You're ABSOLUTELY right.....

It should be on the American People at this great turning point in our civilization that WE, THE PEOPLE make certain that these gasoline tax subsidies are working for US.

I love you JSF. Chances are we agree on 90% of everything even if there are some issues we are polar opposites on.

I think this one is one of the ones we can give at least a big 80% mutual approval of common ground if not nearly 20% more. :)


Do Right, Be Right. :)

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Tuesday, November 18, 2014 7:46 PM

JEWELSTAITEFAN


Quote:

Originally posted by 6IXSTRINGJACK:
It's hard for me to post the whole thing and read it again JSF, so I'm just going to answer your questions, if you please ;)


Q: Are you saying that, after taxes, your $4 could buy 5 gallons? You say the price of gas was $.80 per gallon? In 1996?

A: Yes... in 1997-1998, actually. At least by me it was. It was just a fun road trip. Back in late 199-Whatever it was, I was able to buy gas in Indiana for 76 cents a gallon


I do not recall gas prices that low at that time. Online search indicates $1.23 average for 1996, and I assume that is for the lowest price-per gallon fuel (the most expensive and polluting fuel). Does Indiana have some incredible fuel subsidy?
Quote:


Q: The problem is that the minimum wage has risen, to reduce your buying power. The min wage then was $4.25/hr, and now it has almost doubled. So the costs of goods and services is now almost doubled, but your take home pay has not. The increase in minimum wage is a large culprit.

A: I'm not exactly following this.


I'll show you a ton of proof that prices on ordinary "neccity type goods" have nearly quadrupled since the late 90's.


Yet you insist on pretending that the increase in prices has nothing to do with the big cause - the increase in minimum wage.
Quote:


Q: Are you arguing that the min wage increase WILL hurt small businesses, or WILL NOT hurt? Your above statements seem conflicting, or unclear.

A: I know it will hurt my parent's business. I have to believe that it will hurt a lot of people's parents businesses.


Now you are catching on.
Quote:


Forget a minimum wage increase. The increased prices of good for everyone will nullify it.


Again, now you are on target.
Quote:


Q: [Well, maybe not a question, but an awesome statement nonetheless... ;)] Very perceptive.


STATEMENT: Government control of prices? Because the government does such a good job of managing the economy and price controlling.

You're ABSOLUTELY right.....

It should be on the American People at this great turning point in our civilization that WE, THE PEOPLE make certain that these gasoline tax subsidies are working for US.


In my state, the Dems raided all of the funds related to fuel and handed them over to Unions, Dem fundraisers, Unions, and also Unions. This past election we passed a referendum to prohibit this from happening again. Like the Dems are going to start obeying the law.

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Tuesday, November 18, 2014 9:29 PM

JONGSSTRAW


The Federal Minimum Wage has been stuck at $7.25/hr for over five years. That amount is insulting. I'm amazed that anyone would do any work for measly scraps like that. I made more money than that 50 years ago shoveling snow and mowing lawns. $7.25 in 2014 is pure bullshit.

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Wednesday, November 19, 2014 8:16 PM

JEWELSTAITEFAN


Quote:

Originally posted by Jongsstraw:
The Federal Minimum Wage has been stuck at $7.25/hr for over five years. That amount is insulting. I'm amazed that anyone would do any work for measly scraps like that. I made more money than that 50 years ago shoveling snow and mowing lawns. $7.25 in 2014 is pure bullshit.


3 cents per day would surely be better, as American companies pay their workers in China to avoid paying Americans who are too lazy to work.

Are the libtards complaining that Benito Obama has refused to raise the minumum wage since July 2009, even with complete control of both houses of Congress?

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Wednesday, November 19, 2014 10:59 PM

JONGSSTRAW



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Monday, December 1, 2014 6:22 PM

JEWELSTAITEFAN


Why aren't the Ferguson rioters chanting for more pay?

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Tuesday, December 16, 2014 12:48 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Quote:

Originally posted by JEWELSTAITEFAN:
Quote:

Originally posted by 6IXSTRINGJACK:
It's hard for me to post the whole thing and read it again JSF, so I'm just going to answer your questions, if you please ;)


Q: Are you saying that, after taxes, your $4 could buy 5 gallons? You say the price of gas was $.80 per gallon? In 1996?

A: Yes... in 1997-1998, actually. At least by me it was. It was just a fun road trip. Back in late 199-Whatever it was, I was able to buy gas in Indiana for 76 cents a gallon


I do not recall gas prices that low at that time. Online search indicates $1.23 average for 1996, and I assume that is for the lowest price-per gallon fuel (the most expensive and polluting fuel). Does Indiana have some incredible fuel subsidy?
Quote:


Q: The problem is that the minimum wage has risen, to reduce your buying power. The min wage then was $4.25/hr, and now it has almost doubled. So the costs of goods and services is now almost doubled, but your take home pay has not. The increase in minimum wage is a large culprit.

A: I'm not exactly following this.


I'll show you a ton of proof that prices on ordinary "neccity type goods" have nearly quadrupled since the late 90's.


Yet you insist on pretending that the increase in prices has nothing to do with the big cause - the increase in minimum wage.
Quote:


Q: Are you arguing that the min wage increase WILL hurt small businesses, or WILL NOT hurt? Your above statements seem conflicting, or unclear.

A: I know it will hurt my parent's business. I have to believe that it will hurt a lot of people's parents businesses.


Now you are catching on.
Quote:


Forget a minimum wage increase. The increased prices of good for everyone will nullify it.


Again, now you are on target.
Quote:


Q: [Well, maybe not a question, but an awesome statement nonetheless... ;)] Very perceptive.


STATEMENT: Government control of prices? Because the government does such a good job of managing the economy and price controlling.

You're ABSOLUTELY right.....

It should be on the American People at this great turning point in our civilization that WE, THE PEOPLE make certain that these gasoline tax subsidies are working for US.


In my state, the Dems raided all of the funds related to fuel and handed them over to Unions, Dem fundraisers, Unions, and also Unions. This past election we passed a referendum to prohibit this from happening again. Like the Dems are going to start obeying the law.





Gas in Illinois was 98 cents. I could buy a carton of Marlboros for 20 bucks. If my friends loaded in my car on the weekend we could buy cartons for 16 bucks and I could get gas at 78 cents.

I'm not lying.....

I don't care what the national average was. That's why it's an "Average" between 50 other states.....

You go on later then to try to argue with me that prices on nearly everything else have quadripled....

Why are you arguing with me. I already know this and tell everyone about this.

Minimum wage hikes don't fix anything. Bandaid on a forever wound is all...

Something's gotta stop the flow......





Do Right, Be Right. :)

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