First, let me explain something. All money and derivative credit is
first produced by government fiat. It is then spent and extended in
a manner to support economic activity that both implements government
policy and expands the economy. It then taxed back mostly as it
passes through the hands of the people over and over again.
Understanding that it should be obvious that it is sound policy to
ensure a living wage tied directly to a legitimate measure of
inflation and to ensure one hundred percent labor force participation
at that wage or better. This naturally stimulates the maximum tax
recovery preferably through a universal VAT system that also clips
interest and incomes. Thus every spin of a dollar bill loses a few
points.
There will still be plenty of folks outside such a system, at least
for a time. However, if you followed me this far, it should be clear
that a minimum wage set point needs to be to the level of a living
wage.
In the real world, real jobs are going for $12.00 per hour because
employers need to keep employees. Less that a living wage means
certain turn over. Thus setting the minimum wage below this easily
established benchmark simply promotes abusive counter productive
labor practices.
I should also mention that the minimum wage needs to be applied to
all farm workers however you think traditional slavery is good for
us. Our own experience with that was that prices immediately
adjusted. The worker took his piece, the farmer took his piece and
that was that. It goes without saying that in farming, piece work
rules will apply as long as a good worker can make minimum wage. It
also allows a less productive member of a family to make money.
In fact a lot of tasks need to be adjusted in this manner. No one
should care too much if some days you take five hours to deliver four
hours production as long as it can be seen to be fair. Most
important, though, it allows the worker to manage his work flow and
compensate for body exhaustion and other issues.
How High Could the
Minimum Wage Go?
Friday, 15 February
2013 09:36 By Jeannette Wicks-Lim
A 70 percent boost -
to $12.30/hour - would help millions of workers, without killing
jobs.
The minimum wage needs
a jolt—not just the usual fine-tuning—if it’s ever going to
serve as a living wage. Annual full-time earnings at today’s $7.25
federal minimum wage are about $15,000 per year. This doesn’t come
anywhere near providing a decent living standard by any reasonable
definition, for any household, least of all households with children.
But among the seventeen states that either have active campaigns to
raise their minimum wage or have raised them already this year, none
have suggested raising the wage floor by more than 20%.
How high can the
minimum wage go? As it turns out, a lot higher. Economists typically
examine whether current minimum-wage laws hike pay rates up too high
and cause employers to shed workers from their payrolls in response.
But the current stockpile of economic research on minimum wages
suggests that past increases have not caused any notable job losses.
In other words, minimum wages in the United States have yet to be set
too high. In fact, if we use past experience as a guide,
businesses should be able to adjust to a jump in the minimum wage as
great as 70%. That would push the federal minimum wage up to
$12.30. In states with average living costs, full-time
earnings at $12.30 per hour can cover the basic needs of the typical
low-income working household (assuming both adults in two-adult
households are employed).
Why is such a large
increase possible? It’s because minimum-wage hikes—particularly
those in the 20-to-30% range adopted in the United States—impose
very modest cost increases on businesses. This is true even for the
low-wage, labor-intensive restaurant industry. And because these cost
increases are so modest, affected businesses have a variety of
options for adjusting to their higher labor costs that are less
drastic than laying off workers.
Take, for example, the
31% rise in Arizona’s state minimum wage in 2006, from $5.15 to
$6.75. My colleague Robert Pollin and I have estimated that the
average restaurant in Arizona could expect to see its costs rise
between 1% and 2% of their sales revenue. What kind of adjustment
would this restaurant need to make? A price hike of 1% or 2% would
completely cover this cost increase. This would amount to raising the
price of a $10.00 meal to $10.20.
To figure out what is
the largest increase businesses can adjust to without laying off
workers, we can take stock of what we know about how businesses have
adjusted in the past and then figure out how much businesses can
adjust along those lines.
Let’s stick with the
example of restaurants, since these businesses tend to experience the
largest rise in costs. And let’s start with a big increase in the
minimum wage: 50%. If we add together all the raises mandated by such
an increase in the minimum wage (assuming the same number of workers
and hours worked), the raises employers would need to give workers
earning wages above the minimum wage to maintain a stable wage
hierarchy, and their higher payroll taxes, the total cost increase of
a 50% minimum-wage hike would be 3.2% of restaurant sales.
The cost increase that
these restaurants need to absorb, however,will actually be even
smaller than 3.2% of their sales revenue.That’s because when
workers’ wages rise, workers stay at their jobs for longer periods
of time, saving businesses the money they would otherwise have spent
on recruiting and training new workers. These savings range between
10% and 25% of the costs from raising the minimum wage. If the higher
wage motivates workers to work harder, businesses would experience
even more cost savings.
So what would happen
if restaurants raised their prices to cover their minimum wage cost
increases? One answer is that people may react to the higher prices
by eating out less often and restaurant owners would lose business.
With a large enough falloff in business, restaurants would have to
cut back on their workforce. But it’s unlikely that a price
increase as small as 3% would stop people from eating out. Think
about it: if a family is already willing to pay $40.00 to eat dinner
out, it hardly seems likely that a price increase as small as $1.20
would to cause them to forgo all the benefits of eating out like
getting together with family or friends and saving time in meal
preparation, clean up, and grocery shopping.
Still, let’s assume
that a 3% price hike actually does influence people to eat out less.
The key questions now are how much less and can restaurant owners
make up their lost business activity? Economists have found that
restaurant patrons do not react strongly to changes in menu prices
(economists call this an “inelastic” demand). Estimates from
industry research suggest that a price increase of 3% may reduce
consumer demand by about 2%.
However, if these
small price increases take place within a growing economy—even a
slow-growing economy—restaurant owners will probably see basically
no change in their sales. This is because as the economy expands and
peoples’ incomes rise, people eat out more. In an economy growing
at a rate of 3% annually, which is slower than average for the U.S.
economy, consumer demand for restaurant meals will typically rise by
about 2.4%. This would boost sales more than enough to make up for
any loss that restaurants may experience from a 3% price increase. In
other words, consumers would still eat out more often even after a
50% minimum-wage hike.
After taking account
of the ways that restaurants can adjust to the higher labor costs
from a minimum wage hike, it turns out that the biggest minimum wage
increase that restaurants can absorb while maintaining at least the
same level of business activity is 70%. In 2004, Santa Fe, New
Mexico, came close to this. Its citywide living-wage ordinance raised
the wage floor by 65%—from $5.15 to $8.50. A city-commissioned
report after it was put into effect found that “overall employment
levels have been unaffected by the living wage ordinance.”
However, even if the
federal minimum rate were 70% higher, or $12.30, it would still fall
short for two major groups of workers. First, one-worker families
raising young children need generous income supports in addition to
minimum wage earnings to help cover the high cost of raising
children. Second, minimum-wage workers who live in expensive areas,
such as New York City and Washington, D.C., require affordable
housing programs.
A 70% minimum-wage
hike is the biggest one-time increase that U.S. businesses can absorb
without cutting jobs, but it’s not the end of the story. In the
future, the minimum wage can inch further upward. For example, it
could rise in step with the expanding productive capacity of the U.S.
economy, as it did in the 1950s and 1960s. A $12.30 minimum wage
today rising each year with worker productivity would reach $17.00 in
just over ten years (in 2011 dollars). This wage would be high enough
so that a single parent with one child could support a minimally
decent living standard. We would finally begin transforming the
minimum wage into a living wage for all workers.
Policy discussions
around the minimum wage need to move past the debate of whether or
not it causes job loss. The evidence is clear: minimum wages, in the
range of what’s been adopted in the past, do not produce any
significant job losses. Now it is time to focus on how we can use
minimum wages to maximally support low-wage workers. Can we raise the
minimum wage rate to a level we can call a living wage? By my
reckoning, we can.
Sources: Jeannette
Wicks-Lim and Jeffrey Thompson, “Combining the Minimum Wage and
Earned Income Tax Credit Policies to Guarantee a Decent Living
Standard to All U.S. Workers” (Political Economy Research
Institute, October 2010).
The minimum wage is not meant to be a living wage. These positions are not meant to be occupied for your whole life unless you a mentally deficient . You get one of these jobs learn, advance and move upward. If you cannot learn ,advance and move upward and need the nanny state to "help" you by raising your wages without merit, then you are a moron. You are responsible for your wage.
ReplyDeletegenerations ago, all men were illiterate and trapped as peons. we do better than that. today a portion of society will always work at minimum wage and that will be true if every citizen is far better trained and educated.
ReplyDeletethe distribution of tasks will always include tasks for which not a lot can be paid. what we do not want is a special underclass tasked for a certain class of work. That is what we are presently doing to the illegal immigrants because we can.
Setting the base wage properly means that our whole economy is stimulated higher and full employment becomes likely. There are actually powerful arguments for guaranteed work at that base level in order to ensure unemployment is no longer an option
Right now skills are been discounted as well by the tangible pressure of economic weakness.
we are so caught up in our own economic paradigm that the idea that a better way could exist is difficult to accept, mostly because no meaningful fundamental economic modeling really exists nor understood.
The Individual is responsible for his education and his emotional state because his mind put him where he is.He is limited only by himself. The Individual 's place in this world is a direct representation of his mindset, how he sees the world and him in it. I am not responsible for you nor you for me.
ReplyDeleteAs for better training and educating if it is in the current socialist system all we will have is more drones . We need innovators and free thinkers . People not afraid to ask "Why ? ".
We are a country populated with sheep, instead of men. Sheep stand by and watch the currency debased and do nothing,sheep that do not march on Washington and demand the Fed be audited, sheep that let wars be fought in their name without asking "why?". Americans die to protect the commercial interests of corporate America and the Banksters. They just wander around with their head up their IPhone.