"If minimum wage goes up, the price of everything goes up."

User avatar
jbird4049
Posts: 1117
Joined: Wed Nov 30, 2016 8:56 pm

Re: "If minimum wage goes up, the price of everything goes up."

Post by jbird4049 » Fri Jun 02, 2017 7:11 pm

DBTrek wrote:
jediuser598 wrote:Suppose you have two employees each making $1 an hour and working 8 hours a day?
I don't think you're against a minimum wage, it's just where's the price at which we set it?

Also, a lot of these places run skeleton crews anyways (as anyone who has worked minimum wage jobs recently can attest). There's a certain point where you can't cut labor any more.
Ok, suppose you can't cut labor any more.
Then you can raise prices or you can lose profits.

Up to a point, of course.
Eventually you'll raise prices to a point where your sales will suffer and you'll run yourself out of business.
Eventually you'll reduce profits to zero and the business goes under.

So every time you raise the minimum wage you're also indirectly deciding what kinds of industries can exist and which can't. Anything rendered unprofitable by your new minimum wage is an industry that can no longer exist in America.
  • The absolute rock bottom minimum wage in the United States is $2.3 per hour, if you receive $30 or more a month in tips. If I counted right that's 19 states and territories.
    https://www.dol.gov/whd/state/tipped.htm
    http://nwpr.org/post/tipped-workers-dif ... age-battle

    Adjusted for inflation, the highest minimum wage was in 1968 at about $11 per hour.

    Adjusted for productivity, or how much you can do, or produce, the minimum wage should today be about $15 an hour. (Businesses are making more profit, or at least in income, but paying less in wages.)

    Please note that all until the early 70s, the higher the productivity, the higher the minimum wage, indeed all wages.

    Part of the reason our economy is still sputtering is that the wages are trending down.

    Effective Official U-6 unemployment is just under %10.

    No income, no purchases.
The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere
The ceremony of innocence is drowned;
The best lack all conviction, while the worst
Are full of passionate intensity.

User avatar
TheReal_ND
Posts: 26030
Joined: Wed Nov 30, 2016 6:23 pm

Re: "If minimum wage goes up, the price of everything goes up."

Post by TheReal_ND » Fri Jun 02, 2017 7:45 pm

The list button was a mistake

User avatar
Fife
Posts: 15157
Joined: Wed Nov 30, 2016 9:47 am

Re: "If minimum wage goes up, the price of everything goes up."

Post by Fife » Fri Jun 02, 2017 8:17 pm

jbird4049 wrote:
DBTrek wrote:
jediuser598 wrote:Suppose you have two employees each making $1 an hour and working 8 hours a day?
I don't think you're against a minimum wage, it's just where's the price at which we set it?

Also, a lot of these places run skeleton crews anyways (as anyone who has worked minimum wage jobs recently can attest). There's a certain point where you can't cut labor any more.
Ok, suppose you can't cut labor any more.
Then you can raise prices or you can lose profits.

Up to a point, of course.
Eventually you'll raise prices to a point where your sales will suffer and you'll run yourself out of business.
Eventually you'll reduce profits to zero and the business goes under.

So every time you raise the minimum wage you're also indirectly deciding what kinds of industries can exist and which can't. Anything rendered unprofitable by your new minimum wage is an industry that can no longer exist in America.
  • The absolute rock bottom minimum wage in the United States is $2.3 per hour, if you receive $30 or more a month in tips. If I counted right that's 19 states and territories.
    https://www.dol.gov/whd/state/tipped.htm
    http://nwpr.org/post/tipped-workers-dif ... age-battle

    Adjusted for inflation, the highest minimum wage was in 1968 at about $11 per hour.

    Adjusted for productivity, or how much you can do, or produce, the minimum wage should today be about $15 an hour. (Businesses are making more profit, or at least in income, but paying less in wages.)

    Please note that all until the early 70s, the higher the productivity, the higher the minimum wage, indeed all wages.

    Part of the reason our economy is still sputtering is that the wages are trending down.

    Effective Official U-6 unemployment is just under %10.

    No income, no purchases.
What's the correct price for a tattoo?

What should a decent salad (a legit salad, not some Chik-fil-a crap no Sunday salad) cost?

Tell me, oracle, how much?

User avatar
jbird4049
Posts: 1117
Joined: Wed Nov 30, 2016 8:56 pm

Re: "If minimum wage goes up, the price of everything goes up."

Post by jbird4049 » Fri Jun 02, 2017 8:43 pm

Fife wrote:
jbird4049 wrote:
DBTrek wrote:
Ok, suppose you can't cut labor any more.
Then you can raise prices or you can lose profits.

Up to a point, of course.
Eventually you'll raise prices to a point where your sales will suffer and you'll run yourself out of business.
Eventually you'll reduce profits to zero and the business goes under.

So every time you raise the minimum wage you're also indirectly deciding what kinds of industries can exist and which can't. Anything rendered unprofitable by your new minimum wage is an industry that can no longer exist in America.
  • The absolute rock bottom minimum wage in the United States is $2.3 per hour, if you receive $30 or more a month in tips. If I counted right that's 19 states and territories.
    https://www.dol.gov/whd/state/tipped.htm
    http://nwpr.org/post/tipped-workers-dif ... age-battle

    Adjusted for inflation, the highest minimum wage was in 1968 at about $11 per hour.

    Adjusted for productivity, or how much you can do, or produce, the minimum wage should today be about $15 an hour. (Businesses are making more profit, or at least in income, but paying less in wages.)

    Please note that all until the early 70s, the higher the productivity, the higher the minimum wage, indeed all wages.

    Part of the reason our economy is still sputtering is that the wages are trending down.

    Effective Official U-6 unemployment is just under %10.

    No income, no purchases.
What's the correct price for a tattoo?

What should a decent salad (a legit salad, not some Chik-fil-a crap no Sunday salad) cost?

Tell me, oracle, how much?
Now that's being absurd.
The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere
The ceremony of innocence is drowned;
The best lack all conviction, while the worst
Are full of passionate intensity.

User avatar
Ex-California
Posts: 4116
Joined: Tue Nov 29, 2016 11:37 pm

Re: "If minimum wage goes up, the price of everything goes up."

Post by Ex-California » Fri Jun 02, 2017 8:43 pm

Entree salads run an average of $10-12 here.

$15 is on the high side and I'll only pay that much if it has some good steak on it

Anything else than that is too much
No man's life, liberty, or property are safe while the legislature is in session

User avatar
TheReal_ND
Posts: 26030
Joined: Wed Nov 30, 2016 6:23 pm

Re: "If minimum wage goes up, the price of everything goes up."

Post by TheReal_ND » Fri Jun 02, 2017 8:45 pm

Ten dollars for some lettuce and shit. LOL

User avatar
Speaker to Animals
Posts: 38685
Joined: Wed Nov 30, 2016 5:59 pm

Re: "If minimum wage goes up, the price of everything goes up."

Post by Speaker to Animals » Fri Jun 02, 2017 8:48 pm

The important point here is that a rise in minimum wage is going to first affect the number of workers. When you increase the price for something, demand falls.

The labor market is not exempt from supply and demand.

Focusing on the impact on prices is a red herring. A rise in minimum wage could have some affect on prices, but more likely, it will only reduce economic activity. There will be less of the same goods and services being sold, but prices could easily remain the same. The primary impact is on price fixing in the labor market, not all these other markets that are only indirectly affected.

To see the impact of these laws, you need to look at the change in employment after the law went into effect. Most likely, you will see some increase in unemployment, welfare applications, etc. I have my doubts that it will affect a whole lot outside of a few industries, honestly, but it will definitely affect the poor in a negative way.

If the left wants to actually do something about stagnant wages and subsistence living, they could -- I don't know -- stop advocating for the mass flooding and glutting of the labor market through unfettered immigration??

User avatar
Fife
Posts: 15157
Joined: Wed Nov 30, 2016 9:47 am

Re: "If minimum wage goes up, the price of everything goes up."

Post by Fife » Fri Jun 02, 2017 8:55 pm

jbird4049 wrote:Now that's being absurd.

What is absurd is you pretending that you *know* the price for anything. Anything whatsoever.

That is absurd.

If you agree, give me any counterexample. A single one will do.

User avatar
TheReal_ND
Posts: 26030
Joined: Wed Nov 30, 2016 6:23 pm

Re: "If minimum wage goes up, the price of everything goes up."

Post by TheReal_ND » Fri Jun 02, 2017 9:01 pm


User avatar
Fife
Posts: 15157
Joined: Wed Nov 30, 2016 9:47 am

Re: "If minimum wage goes up, the price of everything goes up."

Post by Fife » Fri Jun 02, 2017 9:05 pm

LOL, I forgot. Google up "what is the price gold should be"? Then get back to me. Fuck sake you're as dense as he is.