DBTrek wrote: Thu Sep 06, 2018 2:53 pm
Hastur wrote: Thu Sep 06, 2018 2:36 pm
Destroying real jobs by having the taxpayers subsidizing your business isn’t what qualifies as an accomplishment. It’s a fucking disease.
Taxpayers are subsidizing the poor. They aren’t subsididizing a business. You all have this strange conflation issue where a taxpayer subsidized poor person finds a low wage job, and suddenly you believe the taxpayer is subsidizing the business. They’re not. They’re still subsidizing the poor person.
/shrug
By subsidizing the poor workers the government creates downward pressure on the equilibrium point on the labor market. So you end up with more jobs at a lower cost for the companies hiring people on welfare. The taxpayers are picking up the difference.
It is a way to bring down unemployment. I know. I live in an environment where this kind of thinking is taken for granted, but not even us quasi-socialist Swedes goes so far to just let people keep welfare when they get a job. Here it would be some kind of program where companies would get lowered payroll taxes or a direct subsidy if they employ someone that is "far from meeting the market demands". Those programs usually have a large fail rate. Some people are just useless in the modern job market. We have some state-owned companies that only employs "ability varied" people. They just try to find them something useful to do and have no demand for profit.
Maybe I have misunderstood the situation and this is some version of a job program that you have, but to me, it sounds like you just let people keep welfare even when they get a job. That is something I oppose.
Also, to be clear, I don't think you should demand of anyone to pay a living wage for every job. There are a lot of jobs that can be done by people who just want extra income while studying or some might be prepared to have more than one job or they just want some extra money in a family where more than one person works. We have no minimum wage in my country so it's an alien concept to me.