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Old 10-31-2005, 06:57 AM   #41 (permalink)
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It's just really sad to see the country my grandfather fought for in WW2 and worked to make the best nation ever fall apart because of the greed, prejudice and the hatred for the poor. A poor we ourselves make by paying wages noone can live on.
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Old 10-31-2005, 07:30 AM   #42 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by pan6467
It's just really sad to see the country my grandfather fought for in WW2 and worked to make the best nation ever fall apart because of the greed, prejudice and the hatred for the poor. A poor we ourselves make by paying wages noone can live on.
As long as CEO's can look to foreign nations for cheaper labor and materials, a minimum wage hike is like bailing water from a boat with a hole in it. As soon as the hourly worker becomes too much of a problem, then their job will be gone.

Social programs are actually hurting, not helping the poverty problem because companies no longer operate in a self contained entity (United States) like your grandfather fought for. Companies didn't have a control valve (foreign goods and workers) back then to control the pressure that unions and legislation for blue collar workers as they do now.

I don't think minimum wage is a valid argument as long as companies have this option available.
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Old 10-31-2005, 08:16 AM   #43 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by pan6467
Look, when I owned my pizza place I paid my workers $7.50/hour in 1995, and those that worked hard (cleaned and what not without being asked) got raises monthly.. Plus they got tips and mileage (25 cents a mile). I kept my prices below the nationals, I used the best products available (usually paying top dollar to the distributor because I only owned 1 shop). And I still made beaucoup profits.

WHY?

Because, my workers knew I valued them, they were part of the "team" . Their friends and families saw a new pride in them and started buying from me. I helped my workers get apartments, gave them advances for their deposits if needed, made sure they made enough to pay the bills and have 1 night out. They paid me back by being loyal, working hard, and helping me increase business by giving me ideas, giving me a good rep and showing pride in the job. My sales increased from roughly $2500 a week when I bought the place to $10,000 weekly in 3 months.

So my business plan worked flawlessly:

- pay more to the workers (who btw got more in tips and mileage because of the business increase)

- use the best quality product

- sell cheaper

- and I donated the entire night's monies to charity every 1st Tuesday of the month.

I was making a very nice salary and had I not gambled it away with my addiction, there is no doubt in my mind, I would have a chain of Partner's Pizzas.

My point is it is ridiculous to claim any CEO is worth millions while paying the worker squat. You don't get company loyalty that way, you don't build a customer base that way and you sure as Hell can't justify it.

I justified my wages because my workers were well paid also and I could sleep at night.

I have watched others pay as little as possible and lose their business even though they had great product, they had lousy service and no employee loyalty.
Then why are you in favor of government mandated pay levels? Based on your argument, by being allowed to set the prices for your workers you developed a successful business plan. While others who only paid their employees as little as they could went under. It looks like the market is working and you should be in favor of letting the market dictate the wages.

Also, minimum wage increases are supported by unions more than anyone else. Once the minimum wage increases the unions are able to lobby for wage increases for their members since the lowest wage earners are earning so much more now, then the unions can collect more dues.

And if this minimum wage increase arguement is about a living wage and caring for the poor, why aren't the socialists on this board upsed that the suggested minimum wage increase was only a dollar and change? - if you wanted a truely livable wage, you would stop nothing short of demanding a minimum wage of $17 an hour. If you are not happy with a $6 minimum wage, why would you be happy with a $7 minimum wage? Whats an extra $10 a day going to do for anyone? And you might as well argue that everyone should be taxed 100% on anything over $34,000, and that money be given to those who make less, this way everyone can have the same liveable standards.

Or better yet, build a time machine and travel back to the soviet union, or hell, just move to modern day cuba where a doctor and a janitor make the same measly dollars each month. but now every cuban has the opportunity to buy pressure cookers from the government on credit. But they finally got the pressure cooker, thats the good news.
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Old 10-31-2005, 08:49 AM   #44 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by stevo
Then why are you in favor of government mandated pay levels? Based on your argument, by being allowed to set the prices for your workers you developed a successful business plan. While others who only paid their employees as little as they could went under. It looks like the market is working and you should be in favor of letting the market dictate the wages.

Also, minimum wage increases are supported by unions more than anyone else. Once the minimum wage increases the unions are able to lobby for wage increases for their members since the lowest wage earners are earning so much more now, then the unions can collect more dues.

And if this minimum wage increase arguement is about a living wage and caring for the poor, why aren't the socialists on this board upsed that the suggested minimum wage increase was only a dollar and change? - if you wanted a truely livable wage, you would stop nothing short of demanding a minimum wage of $17 an hour. If you are not happy with a $6 minimum wage, why would you be happy with a $7 minimum wage? Whats an extra $10 a day going to do for anyone? And you might as well argue that everyone should be taxed 100% on anything over $34,000, and that money be given to those who make less, this way everyone can have the same liveable standards.

Or better yet, build a time machine and travel back to the soviet union, or hell, just move to modern day cuba where a doctor and a janitor make the same measly dollars each month. but now every cuban has the opportunity to buy pressure cookers from the government on credit. But they finally got the pressure cooker, thats the good news.
How can you argue with this? No rationale, no debate, just insults and attacks.....

God save this country from ourselves.

I really have no idea why people are so against others making decent wages for working hard and trying to live the American dream.

If it were up to some on here they would have the market dictate wages and the world market dictates pennies on the dollar while the rich get richer. Makes sense to me.

Keep the fucking poor poor and have the rich pay more and more in taxes to support those people. Instead of allowing them to feel self respect by making enough to live and feed their families on.

As far as what I paid, I paid it because I had a conscience, not because I had to. But had those wages come back to bite my ass I would have dropped to minimum wage and I have no problem having a force dictate how much I as an owner make while making sure my employees make decent livings, it would force me to work that much harder to better my product to increase my profit instead of lowering wages and benefits to the people that make the product that allow me to make my money.

It's easy to not do shit to improve your company and pay your workers less and keep your profit margin the same. It's harder and more work to raise wages, improve product and keep the profit...... God forbid CEO's and upper management actually have to work for their money.
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I just love people who use the excuse "I use/do this because I LOVE the feeling/joy/happiness it brings me" and expect you to be ok with that as you watch them destroy their life blindly following. My response is, "I like to put forks in an eletrical socket, just LOVE that feeling, can't ever get enough of it, so will you let me put this copper fork in that electric socket?"

Last edited by pan6467; 10-31-2005 at 09:04 AM..
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Old 10-31-2005, 09:01 AM   #45 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by pan6467
How can you argue with this? No rationale, no debate, just insults and attacks.....

God save this country from ourselves.
Only the first paragraph was directed at you. What follows was for everyone else. Seems pretty rational to me though, perhaps you don't want to acknowlege that wage controls are not what made this country where it is today and that by campainging for wage controls you are campaigning for socialist economic policies. But the question I raised, is why stop at $7 an hour when in reality what you want is everyone to have a liveable wage? Is $7 an hour a liveable wage? Wouldn't it be more "fair" for everyone to make $17 an hour? Those seem like straight-foward, debateable questions to me.
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Old 10-31-2005, 09:11 AM   #46 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by pan6467
How can you argue with this? No rationale, no debate, just insults and attacks.....

God save this country from ourselves.

I really have no idea why people are so against others making decent wages for working hard and trying to live the American dream.

If it were up to some on here they would have the market dictate wages and the world market dictates pennies on the dollar while the rich get richer. Makes sense to me.

Keep the fucking poor poor and have the rich pay more and more in taxes to support those people. Instead of allowing them to feel self respect by making enough to live and feed their families on.

As far as what I paid, I paid it because I had a conscience, not because I had to. But had those wages come back to bite my ass I would have dropped to minimum wage and I have no problem having a force dictate how much I as an owner make while making sure my employees make decent livings, it would force me to work that much harder to better my product to increase my profit instead of lowering wages and benefits to the people that make the product that allow me to make my money.

It's easy to not do shit to improve your company and pay your workers less and keep your profit margin the same. It's harder and more work to raise wages, improve product and keep the profit...... God forbid CEO's and upper management actually have to work for their money.
So answer the question. What is a decent wage? What wage would you be happy being dictated to pay? At what level is the wage you are dictate to pay too much? Are you happy to stop at $7 an hour or would you be happy if it were $17 an hour?
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Old 10-31-2005, 09:16 AM   #47 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by stevo
Only the first paragraph was directed at you. What follows was for everyone else. Seems pretty rational to me though, perhaps you don't want to acknowlege that wage controls are not what made this country where it is today and that by campainging for wage controls you are campaigning for socialist economic policies. But the question I raised, is why stop at $7 an hour when in reality what you want is everyone to have a liveable wage? Is $7 an hour a liveable wage? Wouldn't it be more "fair" for everyone to make $17 an hour? Those seem like straight-foward, debateable questions to me.
You're right countries like Germany, Sweden, and others that PAY workers decent wages and have far less personal debt and national debt and higher standards of living and better educational systems are far less superior to our country where people are far deep in debt and the division of classes is worse here than in the last 100 years and we want to make it even worse.

Hell, why should someone who works their ass off make liveable wages. FUCK them just let the CEO's keep buying their 10+ million dollar mansions and have their golden parachutes and keep threatening to move their factories overseas.

Why should someone who works 40 hours a week be able to support his family, have good decent schools to send his kids to and be able to pay his bills? Fuck that give me mine and fuck everyone else.

Why should we expect our kids to be able to live better than their parents as our parents and grandparents worked to have us live better...... Fuck that it's all in who dies with the most toys wins, and if I pay people less in wages I'll have more toiys than they will.
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I just love people who use the excuse "I use/do this because I LOVE the feeling/joy/happiness it brings me" and expect you to be ok with that as you watch them destroy their life blindly following. My response is, "I like to put forks in an eletrical socket, just LOVE that feeling, can't ever get enough of it, so will you let me put this copper fork in that electric socket?"
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Old 10-31-2005, 09:52 AM   #48 (permalink)
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Thats not at all what I'm saying, pan. You are the irrational one here. All I want to know is what you consider to be a liveable wage. What do you consider decent? How much is OK for the gov't to mandate an employer pays to his employees? How much is too much for you? Furthermore, at what level should there be a cap on personal income? When (If at all) should people be taxed 100% on what they earn, you know, to "keep it fair". No more sarcasm, just let me know what you think.
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Old 10-31-2005, 10:39 AM   #49 (permalink)
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Keep the fucking poor poor and have the rich pay more and more in taxes to support those people. Instead of allowing them to feel self respect by making enough to live and feed their families on.
If someone is working at Taco Bell as a cashier for their career, is that man going to have any REAL self-respect, or respect of others regardless if they make $5 or $9 an hour?

No. The American Dream is that every American CAN reach their goal. It never said everyone does. People do poorly in school, people drop out of school, these people should know that if you work in a minimum wage job your whole life your lifestyle is going to be minimum.

Everyone HAS a chance in America. If your parents are dead broke you still get a free education. If you can not afford college there are PLENY to ways around the problem. I know, my parents have barely spent a dime on me (because they cant afford to), so I got scholarships, I take out loans.

Quote:
You're right countries like Germany, Sweden, and others that PAY workers decent wages and have far less personal debt and national debt and higher standards of living and better educational systems are far less superior to our country where people are far deep in debt and the division of classes is worse here than in the last 100 years and we want to make it even worse.
Those countries also have economies that'd cause an uproar if it happened here. Their jobs are getting outsourced to the point that their unemployment levels are close to what they were during much of the depression (15% is the average at the moment I think).
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Old 10-31-2005, 11:11 AM   #50 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by stevo
Thats not at all what I'm saying, pan. You are the irrational one here. All I want to know is what you consider to be a liveable wage. What do you consider decent? How much is OK for the gov't to mandate an employer pays to his employees? How much is too much for you? Furthermore, at what level should there be a cap on personal income? When (If at all) should people be taxed 100% on what they earn, you know, to "keep it fair". No more sarcasm, just let me know what you think.
There is no magic number, we are a product of a beast that we have let out and let go unchecked.

We opened this box where profits and greed are everything and the worker and production costs are replaceable for cheaper and cheaper.

However, in the short term, that works wonders for the CEO and upper management, works somewhat for the middle class (as products are kept affordable), and totally dismisses the lower class.

Longer term the middle class is depleted, tax burdens shift more and more to the upper class and the poor and middle classes have to find cheaper product to make their dollar go farther. The CEO's lose nothing and risk nothing by moving labor to cheaper and cheaper markets, creating more and more unemployment and lower wages and greater personal debt in the base market.

It is a cylce that is only going to end with either a huge depression, a world standard of living wage, or class warfare. (The last 2 highly and seriously doubtful to happen.... class warfare/civil unrest and demand for change is possible but not with the government climate we have today, they favor business far too much.)

So what's the answer? Attitudes and education. Shifting the focus from profit and how much the CEO and upper management can make while everyone else "fuck them", to focus on everyone as an integral part of the company.

People will be taxed 100% if we continue to decrease benefits and wages because where do you think the payment of their bills comes from? Taxes or the debt isn't paid and prices go up to make up for those losses.

At the rate we are going, only the rich will be able to pay taxes and will have to absorb a greater and greater burden.

Look in the 50's and 60's wages were decent, people could afford to live and this country set the standard in education, healthcare, living in general.... today, we are more focussed in profits and making sure the rich are set... we no longer have a united country in mind we have a division where the haves want more and more at the cost of exploiting and destroying those who are just trying to survive.

My call is when the baby boomers retire and start dieing off, we'll see a world depression and those countries we laugh at now and exploit for cheap labor come back to bite us in our asses when they want to collect the debts we have accrued because we refused to pay people enough to live on without having to go into debt.

But that's just a guess. Our nuclear missiles and military will only keep scaring them for so long. And when the poor here have nothing to lose because they have no self esteems and are working just to live with no benefits, their loyalty will be with those that promise a better life. Even if that comes from outside the country.

We have become a product of our own greed and in the end we will be as viable and as important as a Spain.

So in the end, I guess stevo I have no set answer to your questions..... Just the answer that we better be putting people ahead of greed or we are doomed.
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I just love people who use the excuse "I use/do this because I LOVE the feeling/joy/happiness it brings me" and expect you to be ok with that as you watch them destroy their life blindly following. My response is, "I like to put forks in an eletrical socket, just LOVE that feeling, can't ever get enough of it, so will you let me put this copper fork in that electric socket?"
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Old 10-31-2005, 11:32 AM   #51 (permalink)
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So what does any of this have to do with all the belly-aching because the federal minimum wage wasn't increased by a buck? We would still be in the same boat, no?
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Old 10-31-2005, 11:55 AM   #52 (permalink)
 
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i have to say that i find it baffling that anyone would actually oppose raising the minimum wage. and i do not see anything lilke a compelling argument presented above that would outline the reasoning behind such opposition: could someone provide an account of why it makes sense to view a higher minimum wage as a bad thing?
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Old 10-31-2005, 01:05 PM   #53 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Seaver
Everyone HAS a chance in America. If your parents are dead broke you still get a free education.
Do you honestly believe this (the part about everyone having a chance, esp because of access to education)??? I don't know where you're from, but in Chicago (just as an example, this is true in most urban areas) the majority of people attending Chicago public schools are non-white. Many of the schools rate *TERRIBLY* when comparing test scores, drop-out rates, avg grades, etc, especially when compared to the public schools in the mostly white suburbs. This is the case all over the country - public school systems with predominantly minority students, most especially urban public school systems, compare terribly to their counterparts. You have one of two stances to take based on this: either you think minorities are biologically and/or culturually incapable of success, accounting for their higher drop-out rates, lower performance, and so forth - perhaps you think there is a black laziness gene? - in which case I have no qualm about calling you a racist, or you acknowledge that everyone does NOT have a chance in America.

On top of that, aside for the kids who are fully capable but will never get a chance because they were simply born to the wrong family in the wrong neighborhood, what about the kids who were REALLY born to the wrong family - let's say the kid who has developmental problems because of childhood malnutrition since the family couldn't afford to feed her, or perhaps one who has poor development because of drug use during pregnancy - where do they get the same opportunities? Free education does not necessarily mean good education. I got a free high school education - went to the public high school in my suburban neighborhood, which happens to be predominantly white - and I can tell you right now, with absolutely no question about it, my free high school education was - and I am not exaggerating here - *1000x* better than any public education your average minority kid in the Chicago public school system could EVER hope for.

There isn't a question about it. It is a simple FACT - everyone does NOT have a chance in America. I have not seen a SINGLE reliable study which suggests otherwise with regards to educational opportunities and poverty - and I should know, it's essentially what I've been concentrating on for the past 18 months of my life. Now, either you think education is worthless and want to reject what amounts to an essentially unanimous finding in academia - in which case, your argument about a free education is moot anyway - or you accept the fact that not everyone in America has the same opportunities - or, for some, any realistic opportunities at all.

It's one thing to argue that raising the minimum wage will hurt the economy. I don't agree, but it's not an unreasonable argument. There's a certain amount of logic behind it at least. But to honestly argue that everyone in America has an opportunity, and especially that they have an equal one, is simply incomprehensible.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Seaver
Those countries also have economies that'd cause an uproar if it happened here. Their jobs are getting outsourced to the point that their unemployment levels are close to what they were during much of the depression (15% is the average at the moment I think).
That's very true. Poverty takes a different face in different cultures though - it's more than simply how much money you're making. Just as the economies of those countries would cause an uproar over here, our economy would cause an uproar over there. To us, 15% unemployment is absolutely disasterous. To them, giving people income below what one can reasonably be expected to live with is unacceptable. They both have their problems. With a 15% unemployment rate but government subsidies to ensure people live reasonably well, you run into problems such as depression, loss of motivation, etc - all things which unemployment, or a lack of purpose, can bring to a person. The problem shows its face in a different way here - people growing up in a materialist culture that tells them to get the flashiest, biggest, and most expensive of everything when they can't even afford to own a car that gets them to work reliably for example. It sure feels pretty crappy when you feel rejected by your own culture. Again, a source of major depression and stress. The point is, neither face of poverty is better than the other - 15% unemployment is unacceptable, but so is having such a HUGE gap between the rich and the poor (and basically no middle class). It's just a matter of two different cultural faces on the issue.
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Old 10-31-2005, 01:25 PM   #54 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by roachboy
i have to say that i find it baffling that anyone would actually oppose raising the minimum wage. and i do not see anything lilke a compelling argument presented above that would outline the reasoning behind such opposition: could someone provide an account of why it makes sense to view a higher minimum wage as a bad thing?
You are obviously in favor of raising the minimum wage. If it were up to you where would you set it? and why wouldn't you set it higher than that?
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Old 10-31-2005, 03:06 PM   #55 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by stevo
You are obviously in favor of raising the minimum wage. If it were up to you where would you set it? and why wouldn't you set it higher than that?
Stevo,

I do respect you man, but you have no argument. all you do is question you offer no true debate except "this is socialism.... go back to USSR... communist thinking...." etc.You answer not 1 of my arguments such as paying people better would lessen the tax burdens off the rich, such as paying people enough to live on raises their self respect and their ability to live with a minimum of government support, such as the tax spectrum will equalize more thus bettering schools, and communities.

I have more than offered up my views and beliefs. Where are yours besides the old "prices will go up." fearmongering?

Give me a legitimate reason you feel we do not need to pay a person who works 40 hours a week enough to live on at a standard of living that is not at poverty levels.

I have a feeling all you'll come up with is CEO's need/ and or have the right to make millions and millions while their workers live paycheck to paycheck heavily indebt making as little as possible and of course prices will go up.
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I just love people who use the excuse "I use/do this because I LOVE the feeling/joy/happiness it brings me" and expect you to be ok with that as you watch them destroy their life blindly following. My response is, "I like to put forks in an eletrical socket, just LOVE that feeling, can't ever get enough of it, so will you let me put this copper fork in that electric socket?"
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Old 10-31-2005, 03:10 PM   #56 (permalink)
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I live in South Texas, I've seen the TRUELY poor. I've lived within half a block of them (25 people living in a 4brm house), I've grown up with them. I can tell you that the poor are some of the staunchest opposition to the wage increase.

It is not because of some propoganda the right is spewing (it was a Dem. district afterall). It is because they realize that if they do not get ahead in life they will be poor in comparison whether they get $2/hr or $15/hr. The blue collar workers will always make less than the white collar, the less skills required the less they get paid in comparison, no matter what. The more everyone else gets paid the more everything costs no matter what. The only way to advance to become a skilled worker or get educated. This is the way it's been since the world started, and lofty goals will not change it.

Quote:
. You have one of two stances to take based on this: either you think minorities are biologically and/or culturually incapable of success, accounting for their higher drop-out rates, lower performance, and so forth - perhaps you think there is a black laziness gene? - in which case I have no qualm about calling you a racist, or you acknowledge that everyone does NOT have a chance in America.
I love your logic. I hold people responsible for their success or failure so I'm a racist?

How about being from the poor community, in the Texas school system (ranked among the bottom), in a mostly (re: 90% minority) mexican/black school district. In all accounts I should be working at McDonalds along with half my class. This is not so. Why? because I strive for more, I work hard, and I succeed with my friend (black/white/mexican) who do the same. REGARDLESS of race.

You want everyone to have an EQUAL chance. That's fine, lofty goal which would be ideal. I hail from the school of pragmatism in which I know it'll never happen. I think we should stop pitying people from hardship and showing them examples of those that have risen above it (as I'm trying).

Yes, I see people here at UT driving BMW's, never working a day in their life, while I've been saving since I was 10, have 2 jobs and owe lots in loans. But would you as a parent leave your kids wanting if you had the means? Would you let your kid go hungry for a week because they would otherwise not be able to pay their gas bill (happened on more than one occasion for me), just to pay for some other kids schooling? If you say yes then you're a liar. This is the only way "true" equality in education would occur.

Quote:
The point is, neither face of poverty is better than the other - 15% unemployment is unacceptable, but so is having such a HUGE gap between the rich and the poor (and basically no middle class).
I really enjoyed your second paragraph, you clearly put a lot of thought into it. I enjoyed it till this sentence. I would love to see where the US has "basically no middle class". I agree the rich are getting richer, but so are the poor.
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Old 10-31-2005, 03:15 PM   #57 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by pan6467
Stevo,

I do respect you man, but you have no argument. all you do is question you offer no true debate except "this is socialism.... go back to USSR... communist thinking...." etc.You answer not 1 of my arguments such as paying people better would lessen the tax burdens off the rich, such as paying people enough to live on raises their self respect and their ability to live with a minimum of government support, such as the tax spectrum will equalize more thus bettering schools, and communities.

I have more than offered up my views and beliefs. Where are yours besides the old "prices will go up." fearmongering?

Give me a legitimate reason you feel we do not need to pay a person who works 40 hours a week enough to live on at a standard of living that is not at poverty levels.

I have a feeling all you'll come up with is CEO's need/ and or have the right to make millions and millions while their workers live paycheck to paycheck heavily indebt making as little as possible and of course prices will go up.
what is a living wage?

enough to keep a roof over their head and food in their stomach?

People in India and the Philippines asked me about the American poor they saw via the news about Katrina. The first they asked me was,"Your poor people are fat. How are they poor and fat?"

I explained that some of the poor have cable TV, TV and VCR, some have cellphones... yes there are some poor that don't have those things, but there are far more that are on social service programs that do.
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Old 10-31-2005, 03:18 PM   #58 (permalink)
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Quote:
"Your poor people are fat. How are they poor and fat?"
Processed food has become cheap in America...money cheap, but especially time cheap. For wager earners on multiple jobs...this is often the ruling factor.
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Old 10-31-2005, 03:52 PM   #59 (permalink)
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I'll answer your question Stevo; at least I will take a stab at it.

I think the "living wage" varies from place to place - it would be very different from LA to say Bismark (I'm guessing).

The last statistic I read to make a living wage in Los Angeles:
- $13.75 /hr

To afford the median home in the Los Angeles area (home price - $435,00 for 2BD/2BA condo):

- Household income must be at least $119,000 (at 30-year mortgage. 6%)

So I think it may be more of a cost of living versus standard of living.

In Los Angeles, the cost of living is way disproportionate to the standard of living.

So, I don't think a minimum wage would do much to help here. In fact, it may make things worse. Jobs could potentially leave the area (as many film jobs already have), further diminishing the tax base reducing social goods and services (I'm talking basic ones like road repair). Because a ridiculous amount of people insist on coming to LA already, any artificial wage set would (I think, but not sure) induce even more people to come to LA (EX: $13.50 for a cleaning job or something) further straining the city.

I'm not an economist but I do understand basic market economics and supply/demand. What I don't understand is how come in lean times workers are laid off and CEO etc get raises. That doesn't seem to make sense to me. Or when CEOs are laid off they get $150 million to leave. Hell, pay me $100 and I'll leave my sh*tty job right?

Perhaps there is another phenomoneon at work:
These "low wage" jobs - after the war, weren't they designed as part-time gigs for high school kids lookin' to make an extra dollar or two or houswives with some time as opposed for anyone to actually "make a living" off of? Additonally, the "part-time" nature of these jobs meant no benefits etc. The main benefit was low prices on consumables - products everyone could afford and keep inflation in check.

But then "something happened" and more and more people became reliant on these type of jobs for subsistence. Maybe the oil shocks? created demands for more imports, home grown companies can't compete so start looking for solutions, one of them being moving manufacturing abroad.

Wasn't there a time (post-war)when a family of four only needed one breadwinner? And that could be a postal job, and they could afford a house with a yard and picket fence and one car? Could this be a false or artficial construct - meaning, post war, many GIs bought affordable houses with their bonuses/benefits which isn't real representative of living cost or price of goods. I always wondered about this. It seems like things were way different back then. Or did we pay for it because it was all debt?

As far as the Ford model, didn't he have to revoke the wage he set cause it ended up costing too much? I can't remember but I'll look it up next week after midterms (not trying to antagonize you Pan, just trying to analyze this issue further and stuff).

As for my personal opinion, I like to think we are better than that or this. I don't think we need to go socialist, but I do think for such a powerful and wealthy nation, our bottome line or "lowest" level should be higher than it is. Meaning, our "poverty" should be modest, but not destitute. "Poverty" in America should mean a real basic lifestyle - modest shelter, basic food needs met, modern plumbing etc. No cable, tv, or internet should be subsidized etc (in my opinion). Anything else, well, go out and compete for it. Get an education, learn a trade, etc. If you want that plasma tv, well, you gotta work for it. We need real welfare reform too. Redistributive economics isn't the solution in my opinion. We still need to be incentive based (at least for now until we evolve). But that doesn't mean we should trample people into the ground. I still beleieve our private sector oes better than the public sector even in charitable works. I think big business should decide for themselves. Like Pan did. He ran a successful business based on his ideals and stuff. There are a few corporation like that (at least in my opinion). For example, I like Starbucks: I think they are a good, socially conscious company (no I'm not naive, I mean in a relative way). Southwest Airlines seems to be pretty good too as is UPS (or was it FedEx?). I guess basically, while minimum wage is well-intentioned (and I appreciate that), I just don't think it works well.

Anyways, just my opinion.
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Old 10-31-2005, 04:34 PM   #60 (permalink)
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jorgelito,

it wasn't all debt.

manufacturing jobs did pay "living wages" (wages commensurate with the cost of living)
GIs had huge incentives to go to school and buy homes -- through government subsidies (pan has written about this in numberous threads)
there was enormous social support for a working/middle class


For people preaching self-sufficiency and personal responsibility, they sure demonstrate a complete lack of either when it comes to debates in these forums. For example, get off your own lazy asses and hit the library. Luckily for you all, a wonderful tool is at your disposal: google

so off on a lil lesson regarding research (luckily for you, as well, a number of bonified social scientists frequent this board and we're going to give you the terms you would need to do some of your own research)...

Quote:
The Gini coefficient is a measure of inequality developed by the Italian statistician Corrado Gini and published in his 1912 paper "Variabilitŕ e mutabilitŕ".
Read more about it here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gini_coefficient

type 'working class shrinking empirical evidence' into google and get this:
http://scholar.google.com/scholar?hl...rical+evidence

click on the first link, titled 'Empirical evidence on income inequality in industrialized countries'
here: http://scholar.google.com/url?sa=U&q...liswps/154.pdf
or here: http://scholar.google.com/scholar?hl...rical+evidence

You can read through that entire scholarly study or skip to page 60 and compare our Gini coefficient against other nations'

I have some books laying around but I can't quote them because I stopped digging through the piles.
But readily available graphs exist clearly demonstrating the middle class shrinkage.

google hits: 'is the middle class disappearing'
1st link: http://www.newwork.com/Pages/Opinion...e%20Class.html

4th link: http://www.signonsandiego.com/uniont...13meyerso.html

Quote:
America's disappearing middle class

By Harold Meyerson
October 13, 2005

We're leveling down.

With the bankruptcy filing Saturday of Delphi Corp., the largest American auto parts manufacturer, the downward ratcheting of living standards that has afflicted the steel and airline industries hit the auto industry big-time. As Delphi executives tell the tale, they need to reduce the hourly pay of their 34,000 unionized employees from the current $26 to $30 range to a somewhat more modest $10 to $12.

No one denies that Delphi is losing money – about $5.5 billion over the past year and a half. Its labor costs are roughly 10 times those in Mexico and China, where an increasing number of parts that go into cars assembled in the United States are made.

The crisis for autoworkers, their families and communities isn't likely to be limited to parts suppliers. Delphi, which General Motors spun off in 1999, still sells about half its products to GM. Under the terms of the spinoff, GM is liable for the wages and pension payments of a number of Delphi workers, a fact that has not worked wonders for the value of GM shares since Saturday's bankruptcy filing. The specter of sharply reduced wages and benefits looms over the entire industry.

And in the United States, auto isn't just any old industry. For much of the 20th century, it was, by many measures, our premier industry, the pride of the nation. Its Big Three manufacturers employed the most workers, produced the most output, made the largest profits and paid their workers enough to transform the economic profile of the entire nation.

In 1914, one year after he opened his first assembly line, Henry Ford doubled the daily pay of his workers, saying he wanted them to make enough to buy the cars they produced. The Fordist compact was greatly enhanced by the rise in the 1930s of the United Auto Workers, whose contracts (along with those of the United Steelworkers) created the first employment-based health insurance benefits in the land and soon became the model for our mid-century economy. In the post World War II decades, America became home to the first decently paid working class in the history of the world. This was no mean distinction.

But that was oh so then. If Delphi gets its way, its employees will clearly not be able to buy new GM cars. (At the rate things are going, they'll have to save up to buy gas.) In the face of the combined onslaught of globalization, de-unionization and deregulation, the bottom may not be falling out of the American economy, but the middle certainly is. The very notion of a decently paid working-class job has become a defining oxymoron of our time.

Those middle-income jobs that still come with benefits attached are increasingly clustered in the public sector, where they are becoming more vulnerable politically. In the 1960s, '70s and '80s, teachers, nurses and cops struggled to win contracts comparable to the auto and steelworkers' deals. Today, they are among the last workers in America – along with chief executive officers, we should note – to still have defined-benefit pensions. How long they can go on before their standards, too, are ratcheted down is anybody's guess. In California, whacking public employees has become the primary purpose of Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger; it is the goal that underpins his initiatives in the special election he has called for next month.

So we level downward, and the normal workings of the economy seem powerless to stop it. We are in the third year of a recovery, but poverty rates and the number of medically uninsured continue to rise, while median household income continues to fall. Many millions of Americans are doing very well, of course, but, the inflation of home values aside, their ranks don't include their countrymen whose jobs can be offshored or digitized.

But how many millions of American workers have jobs that can't be offshored or digitized? Two weeks ago, when the seven unions that have left the AFL-CIO held the founding convention of their new federation in St. Louis, that question was uppermost in the mind of Tom Woodruff, the accomplished organizer who will head the new group's organizing campaigns. By Woodruff's count, there are roughly 50 million private-sector American workers – nurses, truckers, supermarket and other retail clerks, hotel and restaurant employees, construction workers, janitors, security guards – whose jobs can't be shipped to Beijing or Bangalore. Only 6 million of those 50 million are union members, and it is the goal of the new federation (whose member unions have little in common save that they represent workers in these non-relocatable sectors) to organize the remaining 44 million.

That's no small task in a nation where the legal protections for union organizing have eroded to the point of nonexistence. But in a nation whose economically secure working class has gone the way of the dodo, few tasks are more important.
If you'd like to do this manually, the data are available at: http://www.census.gov/
you'll want to search for income by 'quintiles' (cut into fifths) and 'median income' (household/individual) changes over time (say, 1960 to current)


that should be plenty to chew on for a while
somewhere deep in this board's archives, I've posted numerous articles and textual references on this phenomena. You are welcome to run a search on my handle.
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Old 10-31-2005, 05:07 PM   #61 (permalink)
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That's it. I vaguely remember reading a whole bunch of articles similar to that one in the past. It's pretty dense stuff - lots of material to glean through. Thanks for posting it. I definitely think there's a polarization between the rich and poor - The disappearing middle-class. But as usual, there's conflicting reports everywhere contributing to the confusion.

However, I'm not sure what part of my post offended you but I really didn't appreciate your snide retorts. I'm hardly lazy and yes, I am self-sufficient thank you very much and I am perfectly capable of doing my own research. What I like about TFP is it's supposed to be place where we can disscuss, analyze, explore various topics in a mature and even meaningful way, without resorting to underhanded insults at other membes. I certainly don't need your condescending attitude on a message board.
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Old 10-31-2005, 05:34 PM   #62 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jorgelito
However, I'm not sure what part of my post offended you but I really didn't appreciate your snide retorts. I'm hardly lazy and yes, I am self-sufficient thank you very much and I am perfectly capable of doing my own research. What I like about TFP is it's supposed to be place where we can disscuss, analyze, explore various topics in a mature and even meaningful way, without resorting to underhanded insults at other membes. I certainly don't need your condescending attitude on a message board.
jorgelito,
I wasn't replying to your post.
I was replying to comments like these:
Quote:
I would love to see where the US has "basically no middle class". I agree the rich are getting richer, but so are the poor.
And that's why I posted the remark about people, like Seaver does regularly, upholding the notion that everyone is responsible for his or her own success (and hinges that to education), yet doesn't seem willing or capable of doing some rudimentary research before discounting the carefully researched positions of long-time members here. Jorgelito, if you search on this topic and/or these handles (mine, seaver's, pan's, secretmethod's, roachboy's) you will see this same topic discussed ad naseum. The interesting thing is, the same points are recycled by all the participants. Yet, for some reason, the people who come to the table without any evidence continue to refute the one's who do come to the table with evidence time after time after time...they just wait a few months and then regurgitate their tired arguments...as if new members won't know or long-time members will have forgotten that they've already posted a host of documentation for the opinion-oriented members to peruse over. Usually that evidence is just ignored....we'll see in a few months.
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Old 10-31-2005, 07:12 PM   #63 (permalink)
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Location: Taking a mulligan
Quote:
Originally Posted by smooth
Your argument doesn't even make sense.
Sorry you had trouble understanding it. It certainly appears that you're not an employer.


Quote:
Originally Posted by smooth
Granting your experience is representative of the population wage earners, and it certainly hasn't meshed with my experience, how would costs increase if you are merely hiring someone to fill a spot someone else left?

Your argument was that people are paid more, then they take time off.
You have to hire someone to fill in that time.
Costs rise.

This argument is bogus.
If you hire someone to fill someone else's timeslot, then your costs remain the same because you simply use the money you would have paid the person who was supposed to be working to pay the wages of the fill-in. Even better, most places I've had experience with pay their part-time workers a lower wage than their full-time workers (and don't give them benefits). So if anything happens other than costs remaining stable, the alternative would be that your overhead actually decreases when the full-time worker goes home and the part-time worker steps in for one or two days per week.
I shouldn't have to explain this, but....

Depending on the size of your company, the additional time off can easily reach a total equal to the annual hours of one or more full-time employees. It's not a matter of simply finding one part-timer.

If that isn't enough, in some lines of work, it is difficult to find people who only want part-time work. Even when it is possible, there are a great many costs that a business incurs that are in direct proportion to the number of employees, both part-time and full-time:

1. Health insurance (!!!!!)
2. Uniforms
3. Training
4. Continuing education
5. Paid holidays
6. Paid vacations
7. Sick days
8. 401 K matches
9. Employee discounts on the company's products
10. Employee-specific protective clothing/accoutrements
11. Bonuses, both production oriented and holiday
12. Background check expenses
13. Down time in which to conduct interviews
14. Down time to check references
15. Advertising for employees/employment agency finder's fees
16. Payments to temporary employee agencies
17. Additional fees to payroll processing companies

The above are some of the reasons it is cheaper for many companies to pay overtime routinely, rather than hire more employees.

FWIW, it would be easier to write non-sarcastic responses if the tenor of your response were a little more civil.
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Old 10-31-2005, 08:53 PM   #64 (permalink)
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EDIT: (Since Marv whined I "didn't read" his post and implied I'm not a "sophisticated reader," I needed to spend some time deconstructing his "argument"
Quote:
Originally Posted by Marv a couple posts below this one
If you had read my post, you would see that I specifically pointed out that part-time hires are not always feasible. I also never said it was MY place of employment, but apparently, I am familiar with more businesses than you.

It may not sound true to someone whose best job has been burger flipping at MacDonalds, but I'll let the more sophisticated readers decide on its veracity.
hahaha, ok, that's rich. Perhaps you can enlighten all of us non-"sophisticated readers" how you think your argument holds any water with something approximating evidence rather than personal insults on my reading abilities--in fact, why don't we look at your writing ability...

Quote:
Depending on the size of your company, the additional time off can easily reach a total equal to the annual hours of one or more full-time employees. It's not a matter of simply finding one part-timer.
If the total time off reaches a full-time employee's yearly income, then that frees enough overhead to pay the salary of an extra full-time employee (your own operational definition hinges on that being true). Time correctly, if you have a rotating worker filling in during the off days of your "regulars", that person can end up working five straight days--or less. Some people even desire split shifts and it wouldn't be difficult to find someone willing to work "on call."

You almost raised a valid point in all of this, up until now I didn't address the overhead associated with training new employees. The reason I didn't do so is because I was under the assumption, because you said so, that you knew what the hell you were talking about.

As any "sophisticated reader," "employer," or anyone who has a grasp of the data on this issue or real-world knowledge associated with small and large business management knows, the cost of training one additional full-time employee pales in comparison to the costs associated with extremely high turnover rates within the minimum wage sector or compared to the cost of burnout by their salaried employees.

Quote:
If that isn't enough, in some lines of work, it is difficult to find people who only want part-time work. Even when it is possible, there are a great many costs that a business incurs that are in direct proportion to the number of employees, both part-time and full-time:

1. Health insurance (!!!!!)
2. Uniforms
3. Training
4. Continuing education
5. Paid holidays
6. Paid vacations
7. Sick days
8. 401 K matches
9. Employee discounts on the company's products
10. Employee-specific protective clothing/accoutrements
11. Bonuses, both production oriented and holiday
12. Background check expenses
13. Down time in which to conduct interviews
14. Down time to check references
15. Advertising for employees/employment agency finder's fees
16. Payments to temporary employee agencies
17. Additional fees to payroll processing companies

The above are some of the reasons it is cheaper for many companies to pay overtime routinely, rather than hire more employees.
It's not difficult to find someone to work part-time. Which version of the US states are you witnessing? It can't certainly be the same one we have hard numbers on because those numbers describe a picture where part-time jobs continue to rise, full-time workers continue to lose benefits and jobs, increasing numbers of US citizens are taking multiple part-time jobs to make ends meet, and salaried workers continue to work longer hours than any other industrialized nation.

The service-oriented sectors hire multiple part-timers because it's cheaper. It's cheaper because they aren't required to contribute to pension plans, pay for health insurance, grant paid or unpaid vaccations, pay for sick days, allow for sick days, pay for uniforms (what jobs are we discussing here; low-wage service or corporate jobs--because the former recycle uniforms and the latter pay for their own suits), continuing education (just where the hell are you working to be getting all of these benefits? Who believes this?), employee discounts (these are a 'cost' of doing business now? LMAO).

Corporate sectors salary their employees (and a number of low-wage corporations are following suit). If your hypothesis were accurate, we would see it operate among salaried workers because it would make most sense for a salaried worker to work less than 40 hours whenever they could. Except we don't, in the article you completely glossed over below, our salaried workers are working more than they would in any other industrialized nation on the planet. Wages have increased over time. As wages have increased, so have hours worked. The evience directly contradicts your hypothesis.
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Last edited by smooth; 11-01-2005 at 01:54 AM..
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Old 10-31-2005, 11:49 PM   #65 (permalink)
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Sometimes I wish some of you were trying to run a small business. Perhaps that should be a exercise in highschool or the like.

I was once told (by a union official I know personally) that the main reason the democrats (unions) were in favor of every minium wage increase they could get was that it created the baseline for where unions could set their wages. After all if UNSKILLED labor gets X then highly skilled Union labor should get X+Y at the very least. I haven't seen anything that would make me think he was wrong, as the concept of a minium wage is economially stupid.
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Old 11-01-2005, 12:41 AM   #66 (permalink)
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It's interesting, if higher paid workers take more days off, why do our highest paid workers put in more hours than any other industrialized nation?

Even if your hypothesis is correct, although the empirical evidence (which neither you nor any other person reciting this comment in this thread have bothered to muster up) certainly doesn't support it, the following seems to argue that workers taking some time off might not be such a bad idea for the workers and their employers...

Quote:
Study: U.S. employees put in most hours
(CNN) -- You're not imagining it. The United Nations' International Labor Organization (ILO) has the proof:

"Workers in the United States are putting in more hours than anyone else in the industrialized world."

Lawrence Jeff Johnson -- the chief labor market economist who has led the ILO team in producing its new "Key Indicators of the Labor Market 2001-2002" study -- also says American workers are, per person, more productive than their counterparts in other countries.

"But we're not the most efficient, when you compare it per hour, looking at the Belgians and the French."
QUICKVOTE
graphic Weigh in on the ILO's study finding: Are you working longer hours now than you were 10 years ago?

Definitely. And I don't like it.
Definitely. And I think it's fine.
I can't tell for sure.
No, my hours are the same or fewer.
View Results


It seems almost cruel to mention this to our Stateside readers on Labor Day weekend, but Johnson says the Europeans' comparatively long vacations -- four to six weeks per worker -- may have something to do with this. "Maybe they're not so stressed" as American workers, who on the average may get two weeks' vacation.

One thing Johnson says doesn't merit emulation is a workweek shortened by law, as in the French workplace where a 35-hour week is the legislated standard. "Mandating it doesn't work," Johnson says. "In fact, they'll tell you that the '35-hour workweek' really means working the equivalent of 35 hours per week over the year.

"But if we're working ourselves to death in the United States," he asks, "why are we increasing the hours? Almost every year we increase the hours of work. American workers put in long hours to make up the gains" in efficiency seen in France and Belgium.

"There are lessons to be learned from workers in Europe."

To that end, the ILO is planning a special Global Employment Forum for November 1 to 3 in Geneva, this U.N. agency's headquarters, with U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan among the attendees. "I'm not going to say that the Europeans do it better," Johnson says, "but we (Americans) need to open ourselves up to learning a little more from others. We don't always do it best."
graphicLabor Day
at
CNN.com/Career
# International Labor Organization: U.S. employees work longest hours

# AFL-CIO releases 'workers' rights' study
# Scott Adams: Dilbert's Ultimate Cubicle
# Fred Dust: Designing for Dilbert
# Andersen study: Layoff 'survivors' cite discontent
# Principal Financial Well-Being Index: 'Erosion in confidence'
# Study: Multitasking is counterproductive

In hard numbers, what Johnson is saying is that his ILO statistics show that last year the average American worked 1,978 hours -- up from 1,942 hours in 1990. That represents an increase of almost a week of work. And it registers Americans as working longer hours than Canadians, Germans, Japanese and other workers.

What's even more concerning, especially to Johnson and his fellow ILO analysts, is that "the increase in the number of hours worked within the United States runs counter to the trend in other industrialized nations," he says. There, "we're seeing a declining number of hours worked annually."

Using the most recently available data, the ILO has determined that the average Australian, Canadian, Japanese or Mexican worker was on the job roughly 100 hours less than the average American in a year -- that's almost two-and-a-half weeks less. Brazilians and British employees worked some 250 hours, or more than five weeks, less than Americans. Germans worked roughly 500 hours, or 12-and-a-half weeks, less than careerists in the States.

Of countries classified as "developing" or "in transition," only South Korea and the Czech Republic tracked workers putting in more hours than American laborers. The Koreans logged almost 500 hours more annually than Americans, the Czechs doing some 100 hours more work than U.S. workers on average.
World of work

The ILO predates the United Nations, having been founded in 1919 under the Treaty of Versailles. A U.N. agency since 1946, it sets and promotes standards for workplace rights, job creation and occupational safety and health. The organization has 175 member countries.

Johnson calculates that the worldwide labor force stands today at nearly 3 billion people -- roughly half the planetary population.
The International Labor Organization's full study is to be released in November for its Global Employment Forum in Geneva.
The International Labor Organization's full study is to be released in November for its Global Employment Forum in Geneva.

Of that large group, the agency estimates that 160 million workers are unemployed. About 41 percent of the unemployed pool, about 66 million, are thought to be younger people.

And there are some 500 million "working poor." They're unable to make more than US$1 per day.

When it comes to the productivity issue, the ILO team is talking about "value added per person in 1990 U.S. dollars."

"Since the mid-1990s, U.S. labor productivity has grown considerably faster than most other developed (industrialized) economies," says Johnson. "Between 1995 and 2000, the average annual labor productivity growth rate in the United States was 2.6 percent, up from 0.8 percent between 1990 and 1995. Within the European Union, the labor productivity growth rate was 2.4 percent from 1990 to 1995. It decelerated to 1.2 percent from 1995 to 2000."

Ask Johnson what's going on and he immediately heads to an area of debate frequently touched on at CNN.com/Career -- the overtaking of personal time by work.

"I played golf on Sunday with a friend of mine, the vice president of a telecommunications firm. His phone rang three times, all work-related.

"We have this blurred line now between what is work and what is play. But we don't want to give up that edge. We American workers don't want to take time away from work.

"If we talk about a concept of 'decent work,' why are we increasing the hours we spend at it? In 2000, I would have thought we'd start seeing some retrenchment in those hours. We didn't.
EXTRA INFORMATION
• Annual hours worked per person, 1990 and 2000
• Labour productivity per person employed, selected economies, 1990-2000


"Now, the numbers I've been seeing between January and now show that the hours have fallen back a little bit. But that's easy to contribute to companies slowing down their manufacturing, less overtime on the job. The economy slows down somewhat, the hours get pulled back. But productivity continues to grow."

One of the most interesting national cases in the ILO's purview, of course, is the Republic of Ireland, a kind of poster country for European potential as workers there get ready to deal at last in euro coins and bank notes.

The well-documented new productivity of Ireland -- 7 percent growth in productivity in terms of value added per person employed -- is a story of almost non-existent unemployment. "A lot of companies from the United States," Johnson says, "went to Ireland to start penetrating the European market. Ireland has the common-language advantage for American companies.

"Ireland also has a very highly educated labor force, a trained labor force -- so much so that a lot of Irish engineers and technical people went abroad in the 1980s and have only returned in the 1990s. They also have a very business-friendly environment and a good proximity to other markets of Continental Europe.

"But the Irish also take long vacations," Johnson says with a sad laugh.
Working hard for the money

"The lower skills have been earning less, the higher skills more," says Johnson of the United States' earnings picture. Real earnings of laborers and welders, for example, trended downward somewhat during the last decade, while earnings increased for occupations demanding more formal education -- computer programming, accounting, nursing and teaching."

The ILO also reports that the wage gap between men and women persists. In 2000, female accountants in the U.S. banking sector, the agency says, earned 27 percent less than men in the same work. Female computer programmers in the insurance sector earned 10 percent less than male programmers.
Lawrence Jeff Johnson, economist, International Labor Organization
ILO economist Lawrence Jeff Johnson: "If we're working ourselves to death in the United States, why are we increasing the hours?"

There may, however, be a narrowing trend between men's and women's wages, Johnson says, even as the world faces an estimated growth of 500 million workers in the next decade.

As he and his agency work to prompt study and policy-making among countries' leaders through such events as the coming Geneva conference, Johnson says he never loses sight of the careerist irony in being an American abroad -- while displaying the work-driven patterns he studies in his native culture.

"I live in Switzerland with my wife and two young daughters, we've been there for five years," Johnson says. "We very much enjoy the lifestyle there. Unfortunately, I work myself like an American.

"I have a young American associate in the office here working with us, went to Georgetown (University), London School of Economics. She has settled into the (Swiss) culture," its work pace and rhythms.

"She can take a long vacation. I can't."
http://archives.cnn.com/2001/CAREER/.../30/ilo.study/
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Old 11-01-2005, 12:41 AM   #67 (permalink)
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You know, that's not a bad idea. I think some places already do that.

I remember in my high school econ class we had to "run" a corporation. There was another exercise in which we split up into 4 groups and had to represent 4 different "interest" groups in a case study involving development of beachfront property:
1. endangered piping plover (a sea bird)
2. local community
3. developers
4, I can't remember - maybe the govt?

Anyways, it was a great exercise cause we had to research and discuss then we had a "town hall meeting" and made presentations.

In our business class in high school, we had to submit business proposals including bdugets and stuff.

In any case, it's always a good idea to sort of let kids (or anyone for that matter) have or experience a sort if hands on experience.

You know in health class they have one project where they have to take care of an egg up as if it was a baby?

Well why not run a small business? I think it would be a great learning experience. Plus write about it etc...

Maybe the unions need reform. I don't think they started off or were intended to veer of course like this.

Um, why would the democrats get an increase in wages? Or do you mean unions?
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Old 11-01-2005, 01:05 AM   #68 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by smooth
WOW, you're an "employer" and you give health insurance (5. Paid holidays, 6. Paid vacations, 7. Sick days, 8. 401 K matches) to your part-time employees?
If you had read my post, you would see that I specifically pointed out that part-time hires are not always feasible. I also never said it was MY place of employment, but apparently, I am familiar with more businesses than you.


Quote:
Originally Posted by Smooth
yep, I still call BS on your post, cuz that's what it is (followed up by even more piles of it, which any worker will now see is crystal clear)
It may not sound true to someone whose best job has been burger flipping at MacDonalds, but I'll let the more sophisticated readers decide on its veracity.
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Old 11-01-2005, 02:02 AM   #69 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ustwo
Sometimes I wish some of you were trying to run a small business.......I haven't seen anything that would make me think he was wrong, as the concept of a minium wage is economially stupid.
The concept of ignoring the will and the wishes of the majority of your constituency certainly parallels your description of the concept of a minimum wage......
Quote:
http://news.ft.com/cms/s/96d703f4-42...00e2511c8.html
Christopher Caldwell: Social logic of a living wage
By Christopher Caldwell
Published: October 21 2005 20:33 | Last updated: October 21 2005 20:33

........The economic case for a higher minimum wage looks strong at first glance. In the US, it was last raised in 1998. The minimum now pays only one-third of the average salary, at a time of rising energy and healthcare prices. As Mr Kennedy noted, a year of minimum-wage work leaves a single mother with two children thousands of dollars below the poverty line.

In fact, the economic arguments for a higher minimum wage are weaker than they look. But the political arguments are strong enough for leaders to cross them at their peril. Mr Kennedy's dramatic statistics do not capture the social reality of the minimum wage. Among those who get it, single-income families are a distinct minority. Half of minimum wage earners are under 25, according to US Bureau of Labour statistics, and one-quarter are teenagers. Many people have to take minimum-wage jobs; it is less clear that many have to stay in them. A person who spends six months loading the dumpster at a superstore, showing up on time, being polite, acquires a record for reliability that is a marketable credential. Removing that first rung on the career ladder could certainly spur unemployment.

Not that attacks on the minimum wage are particularly impressive on economic grounds. Claims that modest hikes would cost jobs - such as were made in the US during the Clinton rise, and in the UK when the minimum was introduced in 1999 - have been overblown. There is something self-contradictory about the twin rationales of the minimum wage's opponents. They see the minimum-wage workforce as minuscule for the purposes of measuring the gains (money for poor people) and vast for the purposes of measuring the costs (bankruptcies and job losses).

There is a larger narrative about how people are compensated in today's economy. It is recounted in a fascinating way by Frank Levy and Richard J.?Murnane, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology economists, who have long studied the gap between the well and poorly paid. In The New Division of Labor, just out in paperback from Princeton University Press, they examine the role of computers in creating that gap. For Mr Levy and Mr Murnane, computers are best at carrying out "rules-based tasks". Computers enhance the value of those engaged in "expert thinking" (thinking outside the box) and "complex communication" (interpreting information). But <b>they drive down the demand for people engaged in the rules-based work that used to support much of the lower middle class.</b> The results are a "hollowing out" of income distribution and increasing inequality. Low-paying rules-based jobs - various secretarial, computational and manufacturing posts - are candidates for either automation or outsourcing.........

....The authors find John F.?Kennedy's remark that "a rising tide lifts all boats" inapplicable in today's economy. The same processes that increase demand for skilled workers reduce demand for unskilled ones. One possibly dangerous consequence, they fear, is that the "haves" of the new economy may use the political clout that money buys to accelerate these processes. But that could set off a destructive reaction. "Our market economy," Mr Levy and Mr Murnane write, "exists in a framework of institutions that requires the political consent of the governed. People doing well today have a strong interest in preserving this consent. If enough people come to see the US job market as stacked against them, the nation's institutions will be at great risk."

There is evidence of just such a perception of a stacked job market. America now has a strong grass-roots political movement that is claiming a level of compensation that cannot be justified by the laws of supply and demand. <b>Last November, a Florida referendum to raise the state's minimum wage to a dollar above the federal one got 71 per cent of the vote.</b> The Association of Community Organisations for Reform Now was instrumental in the initiative. The group, which many dismissed a decade ago as a remnant of 1970s progressivism, is once again a force after campaigns in dozens of cities and states to pass "living wage" laws. One-third of states now have minimum wages above the federal level.

<b>This is not an economic but a political victory. It does not mean that, say, wrapping hamburgers is worth a dollar an hour more than we thought it was. But it may mean that social peace is.</b>
Wake the "eff" up, Ustwo. The perception of voters in Florida, a state where a constant stream of low income families from other states, migrates to in search of "a better life", was that Jeb Bush and his republican party controlled legislature did not represent them in their pursuit of one of their most important issues. These voters went around Bush & co., by an overwhelming majority.

The writer of the above article, Caldwell, senior editor of the Weekly Standard, is one of you, and he "gets it." The minimum wage is a political issue. So was the bankruptcy bill. It was understood that it's passage into law, if it ever was to pass, was that an increase in the minimum wage would be a "quid pro quo", in exchange for the support of democratic party affiliated legislators for passage of the bankruptcy bill.

The republicans, combined with democrats whose votes were influenced by the thousands of new (and older) lobbysists who have come to Washington in the last five years, were able to pass the bankruptcsy bill while resisting the passage of the minimum wage bill.

Short term, the political cost of not passing the bill will probably be felt by republicans in the mid-term election a year from now. Longer term, as Caldwell mentions at the end of his article, the next step will be via other referendums that mimic Florida voters "end run" around their governor and their own legislative representatives, and eventually, via disruption of "social peace".

The surest way to experience the loss of "social peace" in America, and the associated costs of the collateral damage that the lack of "peace" will cause, along with the cost of attempting to restore that social peace, is to oppose an increase in the minimum wage that attempts to accomplish the same goals that congress intends when it votes to increase it's own compensation. People support the "peace" only as long as they are convinced that they have something to lose by ending their support for maintaining it.

Last edited by host; 11-01-2005 at 02:06 AM..
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Old 11-01-2005, 05:54 AM   #70 (permalink)
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Time to breath in here

Lets try to get away from the personal attacks....shall we

You know who you are
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Old 11-01-2005, 06:48 AM   #71 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ustwo
Sometimes I wish some of you were trying to run a small business. Perhaps that should be a exercise in highschool or the like.

I was once told (by a union official I know personally) that the main reason the democrats (unions) were in favor of every minium wage increase they could get was that it created the baseline for where unions could set their wages. After all if UNSKILLED labor gets X then highly skilled Union labor should get X+Y at the very least. I haven't seen anything that would make me think he was wrong, as the concept of a minium wage is economially stupid.
I did run a business and documented it on this post how I paid more than minimum wage and how I grew and why.

As for unions, I'd like to know where these unions are that can demand higher wages considering every union out there is struggling just to survive. Any airlines union, UAW or steel their companies are looking for ways to declare bankruptcy to get out of paying the retirees benefits.
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Old 11-01-2005, 06:52 AM   #72 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by pan6467
paying people better would lessen the tax burdens off the rich, such as paying people enough to live on raises their self respect and their ability to live with a minimum of government support, such as the tax spectrum will equalize more thus bettering schools, and communities.

I have more than offered up my views and beliefs. Where are yours besides the old "prices will go up." fearmongering?

Give me a legitimate reason you feel we do not need to pay a person who works 40 hours a week enough to live on at a standard of living that is not at poverty levels.
Because it is not for the government to decide how much a business should pay its employees. Wages should be set by the market, determined by the supply of willing workers with certain skill sets and the demand for them. I know that the McDonalds near my house starts it's new employees at $7 an hour, which is higher than minimum wage. I know that walmart pays its lowest wage-earning employees higher than minimum wage. I know that the senior partner (my boss) at my firm pays our lowest wage earning staff $7.50/hr, (but they know this is not a full time job and work is dependent on projects) All these prices are set by the market, not by the state of florida. It is not for the government to tell business owners how much they have to pay their employees. Whats next, telling employers they can't pay more than a certain amount to their top executives? Telling walmart that they can't sell this item for more than a certain price? The government was not created to run a business.

To further my arguement I pose the question, at what price should the gov't mandate employers to pay their employees? Jorgelito says a living wage in LA is $13.75 an hr. So why would a proponent of minimum wage be satisfied with any government mandated price floor less than $13.75 an hour? What's the point of raising the minimum wage by $.50 or $1 an hour?

As I mentioned earlier and Ustwo also posted, but seems to be ignored roundly, is the union aspect of the minimum wage increase.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Ustwo
the main reason the democrats (unions) were in favor of every minium wage increase they could get was that it created the baseline for where unions could set their wages. After all if UNSKILLED labor gets X then highly skilled Union labor should get X+Y at the very least.
So in effect, the minimum wage arguement is just a power grab by unions. Most of the bottom wage earners still make more than minimum wage, regardless of what it is set at, but unions are the main proponent of it so they have a baseline to argue for higher wages for their members.

Finally, the minimum wage was never intended to be a liveable wage. It was never intended to be a wage at which a single mother raises three children on. Thats not what the minimum wage is. It is an entry level wage for first time workers and teenagers. If you are still making minimum wage in your 30's you probably don't even deserve to be paid that.

Minimum wage was an idea lobbied stronly by union leaders, and to the average person, like host points out, seems like a good idea. It has gained popularity politically, but still holds not economic merit. Its bad policy and belongs no where in a free market.
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Old 11-01-2005, 07:00 AM   #73 (permalink)
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Quote:
Yet, for some reason, the people who come to the table without any evidence continue to refute the one's who do come to the table with evidence time after time after time...they just wait a few months and then regurgitate their tired arguments...as if new members won't know or long-time members will have forgotten that they've already posted a host of documentation for the opinion-oriented members to peruse over. Usually that evidence is just ignored....we'll see in a few months.
God I just LOVE this thread.

First I'm a racist, now I'm reduced to simply a mouthpiece that doesnt have an opinion.. just throws up on everyone.

However I do admit when I'm wrong. And in the case of income distribution I am wrong.

Quote:
2001 $10,136 $25,468 $42,629 $66,839 $145,970 $260,464
2000 30/ 10,157 25,361 42,233 65,653 142,269 252,400
2000 29/ 10,190 25,334 42,361 65,729 141,620 250,146
Done by the US Census. The poor have gotten *slightly* poorer on average ($54 dollars is not much when spread out through a whole year), while the rich have gotten much richer. The trend also shows the middle class lagging behind.
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Old 11-01-2005, 07:54 AM   #74 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by stevo
Because it is not for the government to decide how much a business should pay its employees. Wages should be set by the market, determined by the supply of willing workers with certain skill sets and the demand for them. I know that the McDonalds near my house starts it's new employees at $7 an hour, which is higher than minimum wage. I know that walmart pays its lowest wage-earning employees higher than minimum wage. I know that the senior partner (my boss) at my firm pays our lowest wage earning staff $7.50/hr, (but they know this is not a full time job and work is dependent on projects) All these prices are set by the market, not by the state of florida. It is not for the government to tell business owners how much they have to pay their employees. Whats next, telling employers they can't pay more than a certain amount to their top executives? Telling walmart that they can't sell this item for more than a certain price? The government was not created to run a business.

To further my arguement I pose the question, at what price should the gov't mandate employers to pay their employees? Jorgelito says a living wage in LA is $13.75 an hr. So why would a proponent of minimum wage be satisfied with any government mandated price floor less than $13.75 an hour? What's the point of raising the minimum wage by $.50 or $1 an hour?

As I mentioned earlier and Ustwo also posted, but seems to be ignored roundly, is the union aspect of the minimum wage increase.
So in effect, the minimum wage arguement is just a power grab by unions. Most of the bottom wage earners still make more than minimum wage, regardless of what it is set at, but unions are the main proponent of it so they have a baseline to argue for higher wages for their members.

Finally, the minimum wage was never intended to be a liveable wage. It was never intended to be a wage at which a single mother raises three children on. Thats not what the minimum wage is. It is an entry level wage for first time workers and teenagers. If you are still making minimum wage in your 30's you probably don't even deserve to be paid that.

Minimum wage was an idea lobbied stronly by union leaders, and to the average person, like host points out, seems like a good idea. It has gained popularity politically, but still holds not economic merit. Its bad policy and belongs no where in a free market.

I can tell you around here exactly what they pay. As Hoover and other companies that paid decent wages close and layoff (with no intention of ever rehiring) the plastics companies all pay starting wages at between $6 and $7 and they go through the Temp companies so they don't pay benefits or overtime. And as far as temp - f/t getting better, doesn't happen. Take North Canton Plastics, they go through Ryan Temps. they pay $6.50 and after your 90 days when they are supposed to hire you as F/T they say there are no positions as they only keep 10 employees (including fronmt office secretaries) as F/T. But Ryan give you a raise of 25 cents 2 times a year.

As for GOJO, they pay $7 -$7.50 an hour depending on shift and offer benefits but the benefits come out of your paycheck so that $7 - $7.5 an hour turns into more like $6, try living on $240 a week with 3 kids.

Most places around here pay about $7 and how do you tell someone that made $18 at Hoover to pay their mortgage, car loan, kids upkeep on $11/hour less and that they are lazy asses who have no desire to advance in life because there are better jobs out there. How do you tell these people that are selling their houses and barely paying off their loans with the sale (because the housing market has fallen) that $7 is all they deserve.

How do you rebuild communities where the tax base has fallen to near zero? How do you expect schools and public safety to run?

IF there are areas paying higher wages on average I'd like to see what the cost of living is in that area.

You let the market determine the wages...... well then our wages are pennies on the dollar and we all go bankrupt.

There comes a time when things have gone too far to one side. Unions went too far now ownership has.

You say manufacturing jobs are a thing of the past? That's an excuse to put the burden of wages on the worker and not the owner.

Well where are those golden higher paying higher skilled jobs??? EB Games, Wal*Mart, Giant Eagle, or maybe the gas stations?

SEAVER (I capped so you wouldn't miss it),

I truly appreciate you admitting the stats and I appreciate your argument, but did your stats tell you the %ages of people living in those sections? My guess is that each lower section gained people each year.

And I do understand your side of the argument. Government should not be needed here BUT unfortunately it is, if owners would pay decent wages on their own then the keep government out would make sense.

I just don't understand how the rich can keep demanding lower taxes, yet supporting lower wages, when the tax burden is definitively being shifted onto them because of the lower wages.

What do we do with cities and states that have cut and cut and cut .... and still are in the red because the workers don't make the tax money. Start cutting emergency services? Start cutting wages to cops, teachers and firemen? Start outsourcing those jobs?

So, you say, move to where the jobs are. On what money? And where are these jobs?

We are moving backward and not forward and it should scare the fuck out of anyone who truly cares about this country.

It's not going to get better and we are not going to move forward again unless 1 of 3 things happen.
- Government starts requiring better pay not just in the US but by all companies doing business in the US,
- or by ownership deciding people come first and raising wages on their own,
- or by a social revolution much like we had when unions started.

I don't see the government doing much because the money controls the politicians and they are bought and paid for by big business and people who have no desire to lose their place or power.

I don't see ownership doing it, there's too much competition to see which CEO can afford the next 10+ million dollar home. To much fear that if they raise wages their competition will just outsource to a cheaper labor market and undercut them.

And I don't see a social revolution yet because there are no true crusaders out there and the ones that are trying are personally attacked and silenced.

So where does that leave us?

As a country we are on a serious decline, if you think your children will have it better than you then you are fooling yourself or you are ultra rich and taking advantage of the market right now buying up as much as possible in Sheriffs auctions and making investments and have the money to do so and not worry.

I can honestly say I don't have it near as good as my parents did, and in retirement they won't have it as easy as their parents did, and my children will not have it as easy as I did. And in the US that is sad because this country was built on bettering the next generation.... and somewhere we lost that vision.
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Old 11-01-2005, 11:08 AM   #75 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by alansmithee
From an economic standpoint, my statement was 100% true. There are volumes of empirical evidence showing this. It's not about there being a fixed amount spent on low wage workers, it's about companies having fixed budgets. If at a certain pay scale comanies demand X labor, when the cost of labor goes up, they will demand less. Its the same as any other good-prices rise, demand falls.
There exist goods for which a rise in prices causes a rise in demand. They are not common. However, your universal statement that for all goods a rise in price causes a drop in demand is not true.

If you look at the sellers of minimium wage labour as a block, the total money going to them can vary with the price of minimium wage, depending on the elasticity of demand of minimium wage labour. Setting a minimium wage is a form of monopoly pricing -- and quite often it is benefitial for a monopoly to price the good they are selling (in this case, minimium wage labour) higher than a free, competative market would.

Quote:
It has nothing to do with utility, it has to do with marginal costs. And if you raise minimum wage, you raise marginal costs of each worker. Now if the minimum wage level still has the MC lower than the MVP (marginal value of production) of each worker, you might be right. But that would never be the case, because MC should always equal MVP (or be as fractionally close as possible). So raising MC would put it over MVP.
This assumes there are no "income effects" from changing the cost of labour.

You do realize that almost every little economic maxim you have memorized has a metric tonne of "the following things must be true in order for this model to hold", right?

Quote:
And it doesn't work like a monopoly, a minimum wage generally sets up a pure competition model, because all firms become price-takers at the minimum wage level.
I am talking about the selling of labour by people, not the purchasing of labour by firms. Setting the minimium wage is a monopoly pricing act on the part of labour.

Quote:
Again, neither of these statements disproves what I said, which was simply that raising the minimum wage lowers employment. And also, I'm sure people laid off due to minimum wage increases are happy to know that those who still have jobs are making more.

And your whole idea about freeing up people for gov't programs just seems ridiculous to me. You might as well have said it will give agriculture a boost, as it causes so many people to have food stamps to spend on foodstuffs.
People who are doing minimium wage labour do not have free time to learn new skills. If you had government programs that trained the unempolyed for higher skilled jobs, having fewer people do minimium wage jobs and training the rest for higher productivity jobs makes sense.

Quote:
How can you have an "arbitrarilly low" minimum wage? A minimum wage would never go lower than what market forces would demand, which wouldn't be arbitrary. It would be what the job market in that area could bear.
If you set the minimum wage at 0$/hour, this would be pretty damn low. It is possibly nobody would work for that much. If you prefer, I could state "the legally required minimium wage" instead of "minimium wage". Given that this thread is about the US federal government setting the "legally required minimium wage", I figured saying "minimium wage" would be clear enough. I apologize if you did not understand what I meant.

Quote:
And the problem isn't even really minimum wage work. The percentage of single-earner families that rely upon minimum wage is miniscule. Minimum wage laws always get a lot of uproar, but usually they just end up being much ado about nothing, because they don't affect the lowest elements of society. Minimum wage laws have the greatest effect on middle-class teens. Unless you advocate a much-higher "living wage" which would be better targetted at lower-income groups, but would also have catastrophic effects upon the economy.
Because the lack of middle-class teen labour would have a catastrophic effect on the economy?

Changing the minimium wage should tend to increase the price of non-minimium wage labour. If only to allow companies to hire and keep better than average workers, or more qualified workers, or to hire people to do less enjoyable jobs...
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Old 11-01-2005, 11:10 AM   #76 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by stevo
Minimum wage was an idea lobbied strongly by union leaders, and to the average person, like host points out, seems like a good idea. It has gained popularity politically, but still holds not economic merit. Its bad policy and belongs no where in a free market.
This statement is certainly true. It would be true here in the United States as well if we had a free market. Since the rich are getting richer by minipulating the system through political corruption, why not minipulate it to throw a few bones to the lowest paid poorest workers as well?

It would probably be best to have our markets free but I don't see our corrupt polititians (Democrats and Republicans) and business leaders letting that happen anytime soon since they cannot seem to ever get enough money to satisfy themselves.

The minimum wage does not hold economic merit but our present system with the wealthy feeding at the public trough does not either. I know that two wrongs don't make a right but what the heck, might as well give the poor a little or they just might vote themselves a truly socialist system.
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Old 11-01-2005, 11:22 AM   #77 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Seaver
God I just LOVE this thread.

First I'm a racist, now I'm reduced to simply a mouthpiece that doesnt have an opinion.. just throws up on everyone.

However I do admit when I'm wrong. And in the case of income distribution I am wrong.
Seaver,

I never said you didn't have an opinion. I'm not sure where you pulled that from. What I was commenting on was the persistence of people to continue to spout their groundless opinions, despite the evidence, repeatedly.

The post immediately precending yours is an excellent example. Both stevo and ustwo walzt into the thread, declare they personally know a union leader, and that they have knowledge that unions always support minimum wage increases because they can demand more money for their workers (usually these two are bitching about unions not doing shit for their members, so this twist is odd to say the least). They move from those factless assertions to additional factless claims: that places down the road, they know for a fact, pay more than the federal minimum wage and somehow this morphs into an empirical basis for their claim that the bulk of entry level positions pay more than the federal minimum wage. Then conclude that all minimum wage arguments are really just union grabs for power...vote pandering as it were.

Inconsistent argument layered over inconsistent argument, a complete disregard for the objective evidence, and regurgitation of talking points repeatedly despite being shown evidence to the contrary all coalesce into an annoying trend on this board.

To your credit, you actually capitulated on a point some of us made that is backed by solid empirical evidence. The part of my post you quoted was pointing out that people like you, who argue for self-sufficiency, should at least take the time to research a point before you start telling other people they are wrong. And if you aren't going to take the time to research a point, you should not build entire arguments around baseless claims (as stevo and ustwo did above).

Now, you'll notice that I have never denigrated you for your ideological stance: that government should not regulate wages. If your personal belief is that the market will take care of wages, there is a debate to be had over how or whether it can actually best do that without government intrusion. But that debate should be held within a context of facts. But I have NEVER made fun of you for being a free-market propoent. But if your basis and best argument is that you talked to someone down the road, and they aren't upset about their wage, and therefore you can speak on behalf of the rest of the minimum wage earners in this country, then I will certainly poke a hole or fun in that statement.

Or lets suspend disbelief for a minute and actually think that ustwo has a union leader as a friend. And that this union leader told him that all unions favor minimum wage increases because it empowers them to make demands for their members. Well, now we have some contradictions, workers (from your anecdote) are not supportive of minimum wage increases, yet union leaders (from ustwo and stevo's anecdotes) support them and are basically the political pressure behind increases.

Well, at this point it seems out of one of you three, someone should be able to actually post some kind of factual basis for those claims. A representative survey of workers' attitudes, a graph comparing union wages to minimum wage increases,...something. Yet, not one single point is supported by anything other than referring to one another's comments. And this thread will die eventually and one of you guys will start something like it back up months from now and the same people will trot out the same arguments that have already been refuted by empirical facts. Given those trends, it appears to be a fair assessment that a number of people in this thread are regurgitating points instead of taking the time to look at the actual facts of the issue before deciding and telling other people that they don't know what they're talking about.
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Old 11-01-2005, 12:29 PM   #78 (permalink)
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Seaver, holding people responsible for their OWN actions isn't racist, obviously - I said that believing blacks are inherently less capable of success is racist, and it is. But, the fact is minorities fail a LOT more than white's in public education, and they are much more significantly members of failing schools. Now, either minorities have some inherent trait that makes them fail more or it is the result of structural inequalities - the statistics and research leave little room for placing the blame squarely on personal responsibility. In 2003, the poverty threshold for a household of 4 was $18,850. Ignoring the fact that it's ludicrous to expect $18,850 to adequately house, clothe, and feed a family of four, with thresholds like that 8.2% of whites were considered to live in poverty in 2003. By contrast, 24.4% of blacks were living in poverty. Either that shows blacks inherently make poor choices, or there is something else creating and sustaining these inequalities.

I commend you for your success. Really. But it's unreasonable to expect every child born in poverty to be exceptional - it's much more reasonable to expect them to be normal. There's a reason people who do what you say you are doing are held on a pedestal: it's because they are the exception and not the rule. Normal people have a much more difficult time lifting themselves out of situations like that.

Now, you say that it's a lofty and ideal goal to seek equal opportunities. To a certain extent I don't disagree. You're right in that it will never be the case. However, it's silly to not minimalize the problem and do what we can to fix it. In 1969, less than 3% of children lived in poverty. In 1993, around 20% of children lived in poverty. In 2003, it was about 17%. Even more interestingly, the percentage of black children living in poverty in 2003 was 34% in contrast with about 10% of white children living in poverty. You're not going to tell me the rise was unavoidable and is unfixable - at the very least across racial lines.

To be honest, I'm not sure what you're getting at regarding the "only way 'true' equality in education would occur." I think you're implying that seeking more equality in education would put more people in poverty, but I'm not sure where you get that idea. Bringing this response closer to the original thread topic, between 1979 and 2000, the bottom fifth of wage earners saw a meager 9% increase in AFTER-TAX income ($1,100) compared to a 255% rate of inflation (the equivalent of $100 in 1979 is $254.99 in 2000). By contrast, the top 1% of wage earners saw a 201% increase in AFTER-TAX income between 1979 and 2000 ($576,400). Neither has kept up with inflation, but the top 1% has seen 20x more increase than the bottom fifth relative to their respective 1979 wages. Looking at the raw numbers, the average income of a wage earner in the top 1% has increased 524x that of the average in the bottom fifth. I'm not sure where you got the idea that the poor are getting richer along with the rest. Oh, and lest you think I'm finding these increases through statistical manipulations of some sort, these are directly from your very own government's Congressional Budget Office.

EDIT: Just read your later post admitting being wrong about the poor, consider this a broader supplement to that then.
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Old 11-01-2005, 01:12 PM   #79 (permalink)
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Here's one poll of many; there are several more recent with basically the same numbers but this is the most recent one I can find with a demographic breakdown.

Overwhelming majorities of people in the U.S. favor increasing the minimum wage. In fact, a majority of republicans or conservatives favor increasing it.

Quote:
QUESTION NUMBER: 030

QUESTION:
(How important do you think each of the following goals is for the federal government to work on this year--is it vital, extremely important, quite important, not that important, or not important at all?)...Raise the minimum wage to six dollars and fifteen cents by the year 2000.

RESULTS:


Vital - 30%

Extremely important - 21

Quite important - 21

Not that important - 16

Not important at all - 9

Not sure - 3

DEMOGRAPHICS: V EI QI NTI NI NS


477 Male 29 15 20 18 15 3
527 Female 31 28 23 14 3 2
772 White 26 19 24 18 11 3
105 Black 50 33 8 6 1 2
64 Hispanic 37 40 3 11 6 3
10 Asian 32 0 35 18 16 0
76 < HS grad 35 39 12 11 0 3
306 HS graduate 38 24 19 13 5 1
306 Some college 28 22 21 15 12 2
162 College grad 17 14 29 22 14 4
143 Post grad 28 13 23 19 11 5
194 East 24 24 26 12 8 7
239 Midwest 29 17 28 20 4 2
368 South 34 21 18 13 12 1
203 West 29 25 16 17 10 3
200 Republican 21 17 18 25 17 2
297 Democrat 44 24 18 7 2 4
444 Independent 25 21 25 17 9 2
47 < $ 10,000 45 19 13 16 3 3
99 $ 10,000-19,999 39 27 13 9 9 2
127 $ 20,000-29,999 33 22 32 10 2 2
248 $ 30,000-49,999 32 20 27 11 8 2
173 $ 50,000-74,999 25 19 14 28 12 2
168 $ 75,000 & over 17 20 25 17 14 6
252 Liberal 42 23 22 8 4 1
292 Moderate 29 22 26 16 5 3
309 Conservative 22 20 15 23 16 4
211 18-29 years old 32 23 19 15 7 3
233 30-39 26 19 29 17 8 1
191 40-49 22 24 22 15 11 6
155 50-59 33 20 21 15 9 1
214 60 and over 36 21 15 16 11 2
163 Union household 24 21 35 15 5 0
827 Non-union hh 31 21 19 16 10 3

ORGANIZATION CONDUCTING SURVEY: HART AND TEETER RESEARCH COMPANIES

POPULATION: National adult

NUMBER OF PARTICIPANTS: 1,004

INTERVIEW METHOD: Telephone

SURVEY SPONSOR: NBC News, Wall Street Journal

BEGINNING DATE: April 18, 1998

ENDING DATE: April 20, 1998

SOURCE DOCUMENT: NBC NEWS, WALL STREET JOURNAL POLL

DATE OF RELEASE OF SOURCE DOCUMENT: April 1998

QUESTION ID: USNBCWSJ.98AP18, R06E

LOAD-DATE: December 11, 1998
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Old 11-01-2005, 05:22 PM   #80 (permalink)
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Didn't notice this tidbit at first (from the poll I posted above):

Quote:
163 Union household 24 21 35 15 5 0
827 Non-union hh 31 21 19 16 10 3
Interestingly 31% of non-union households think an increase is "vital," as compared to 24% of union households, with a large enough sample size to be a significant difference. But the overall sum in favor is hardly different in the two groups.
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