buckwilk
Well-known member
Raising the minimum wage does two things, increases unemployment, raises cost to the consumer.
cyndi said:We're getting dangerously close to political, again. Has this thread run it's course?
LeeRevell said:"TANSTAAFL"
A good word to live by.
Gary68 said:the sad part is that socal is one of the nicest places in the u.s. minus all the urban/people stuff,same with the fl keys
Gary68 said:the sad part is that socal is one of the nicest places in the u.s. minus all the urban/people stuff,same with the fl keys
pros80 said:It looks like a deal was reached to hike the minimum wage in California to $15 per hour .
https://www.yahoo.com/news/video/deal-reached-hike-california-minimum-034800613.html
Can this be an advantage for van dwellers who take retail or other minimum wage jobs in the state? Live in the van save on rent and save money for travels by working a minimum wage job etc..
i am wondering what these clowns will do once business either go under because they refuse to pay 15.00 minimum wage?? or everything goes automated and they have nothing to fall back on once there out of a job :huh: ..buckwilk said:I think van dwellers will find those jobs more difficult to find. Most jobs are in the small business sector, this is an added expense which will cause them to cut employees. Early analysis is saying this will cause the loss of 700,000 jobs in the state. More people leave Cal. every year than arrive. 5 million people leave the state every decade, 3.9 million move there. A net loss of over 1 million. The folks who leave are considered to be the best educated, most productive. Businesses report an inability to find trained, experienced employees. This prompts them to leave the state. Personal state income tax is 13.3 % highest in the nation. There are only two areas with higher costs of living than Ca., D.C. and Hawaii. If you and I agree that I will work for you for $5 an hour, why should the government say that can't happen?
cognitive dissonance said:Saying "TANSTAAFL" isn't political. It's merely the acknowledgement of physical reality. (Of course, to some, actually telling the truth about something is the most intensely political act there is...)
Not long ago, I kidded debit servus in his discussion of using an overunity "free lunch" to propel his van. I pointed out that no less than Albert Einstein was persuaded that the laws of thermodynamics (the laws that, among other things, preclude free lunches in energy) would never be broken.
We humans are great at constructing systems that hold nature at bay, but they never work forever. We're just good enough at these systems to kid ourselves that we are immune from nature.
We're not. We're part of nature, and there's no way out. And, as anyone who understands energy and thermodynamics likes to say, nature bats last!
Keep in mind that as a nation, we're already bankrupt. We're now faking prosperity using currency created out of thin air. I'm sure most here will agree that the "recovery" is a counterfeit recovery, that not many are as well off today as 10 years ago.
So, go ahead and raise the minimum wage. As an example, here's how this will impact McDonalds: value meal items will be $2-3, not the $1 they are now. A quarter pounder sandwich might cost you $6-8, the full meal will likely be well over $10. Then, only two things can happen:
1) Assuming the same number of sandwiches are sold at the new higher prices (!) look for robots to replace humans in most roles. The robots already exist, they will become price competitive with fast food kitchen labor long before the minimum wage reaches $15. (Robots show up for work, too!)
But sales won't stay the same. In the real world, when prices go up, sales always go down. So:
2) Look for a combination of robots and layoffs. If McDonalds is only half as busy, they can get by with at least 40% less help. That's just an example, in nice round numbers.
Part of that comes directly from fewer sales, but even at lower volumes, $15/hr for kitchen labor will justify at least a few robots in every restaurant.
Problem is, I don't think sales COULD decline that much without going straight to zero. In a business dependent on high volume, sales don't need to drop very far before the entire equation collapses. As in, one can't afford the real estate, or the building, or the property taxes, or the franchise fee, much less the employees.
Volume is the linchpin. McDonalds same store sales have been declining YOY since the 2008 money printing follies began. Franchisees are already very worried. (I know one, and he cancelled plans for two new restaurants 7 years ago, and hasn't given expansion a serious thought since. In fact, he's trying to sell his existing stores.)
A price increase like the one this would cause could be the straw that breaks the camels' back. It could set in motion the downward sales spiral that ends the fast food industry altogether. (I know it's possible - I'm now wondering if it's probable...)
Obviously, this fewer jobs/no jobs thing that results will crush the exact people it's supposed to help. I say obviously, because it IS obvious. From an economic standpoint, the $15 minimum wage is a conspicuously bad idea that cannot be fully explained away by economic illiteracy.
Please, don't anyone misconstrue this as political. It's just nature and arithmetic.
Exactly. Two corollaries occur to me:highdesertranger said:to put it plain and simple, if you make it more expensive for business to do something, they will do less of it. there is no way around it. highdesertranger
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