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Can one of you economic geniuses explain why raising the minimum wage to
$15/hr is going to benefit millions of low income people? Put aside the fact that traditionally minimum wage jobs were filled by high school students in the afternoons and weekends to earn a little date money. No one was trying to pay a mortgage or rent and feed a family earning minimum wage. Seems to me that if the minimum wage is raised, the cost of goods and services by those offering minimum wage jobs will rise. If the cost of goods and services goes up, then the price charged for them will also go up. In short order, people making minimum wage will have their buying power pretty much back to where it was before the increase. I know it sounds good for political candidates to promise increases in minimum wage, but realistically what does it accomplish? Wouldn't it be better to develop programs that encourage business growth and expansion, thus creating much higher pay scales that people can provide for a family with? Leave the minimum wage jobs for teenagers. |
#2
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posted to rec.boats
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Mr. Luddite wrote:
Can one of you economic geniuses explain why raising the minimum wage to $15/hr is going to benefit millions of low income people? Put aside the fact that traditionally minimum wage jobs were filled by high school students in the afternoons and weekends to earn a little date money. No one was trying to pay a mortgage or rent and feed a family earning minimum wage. Seems to me that if the minimum wage is raised, the cost of goods and services by those offering minimum wage jobs will rise. If the cost of goods and services goes up, then the price charged for them will also go up. In short order, people making minimum wage will have their buying power pretty much back to where it was before the increase. I know it sounds good for political candidates to promise increases in minimum wage, but realistically what does it accomplish? Wouldn't it be better to develop programs that encourage business growth and expansion, thus creating much higher pay scales that people can provide for a family with? Leave the minimum wage jobs for teenagers. Actually raising the minimum wage is counter productive! We make it even easier to justify sending labor jobs overseas. |
#3
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posted to rec.boats
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On 10/14/15 5:34 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
Can one of you economic geniuses explain why raising the minimum wage to $15/hr is going to benefit millions of low income people? Put aside the fact that traditionally minimum wage jobs were filled by high school students in the afternoons and weekends to earn a little date money. No one was trying to pay a mortgage or rent and feed a family earning minimum wage. Seems to me that if the minimum wage is raised, the cost of goods and services by those offering minimum wage jobs will rise. If the cost of goods and services goes up, then the price charged for them will also go up. In short order, people making minimum wage will have their buying power pretty much back to where it was before the increase. I know it sounds good for political candidates to promise increases in minimum wage, but realistically what does it accomplish? Wouldn't it be better to develop programs that encourage business growth and expansion, thus creating much higher pay scales that people can provide for a family with? Leave the minimum wage jobs for teenagers. You can't put aside the fact that more than half of today's minimum wage workers are not teenagers, a lot of them are women, and a lot of them are trying to support themselves and their families. Oh, and people with more money in their pockets at that part of the economic scale spend their money, and that creates more demand for services and products and more jobs. Robert Reich has a bit on this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WXKLa2zfoTk At present, the federal minimum wage is half of that $15. That higher number is a goal. |
#4
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#6
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posted to rec.boats
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On Wed, 14 Oct 2015 18:32:46 -0400, Keyser Söze
wrote: Oh, and people with more money in their pockets at that part of the economic scale spend their money, and that creates more demand for services and products and more jobs. That is a "jobs" problem, not a wage problem. We need more jobs that justify more than minimum wage |
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