It won't apply to fruit/vegetables/nuts. Those things are harvested by illegals for less than min wage.jediuser598 wrote:Well, let's compare apples to apples then.Speaker to Animals wrote:The price of milk is determined by a few co-ops. Lots of stores actually sell it at a loss to get people in the door to buy other things. The argument against raising the minimum wage so high has more to do with it's impact on unemployment and under-employment.
If you want to look at it's impact on prices, then you might want to look at fast food restaurants. That would make more sense, since the price of the food is heavily impacted by the labor costs, whereas something like a grocery store is much more insulated due to the high volume purchases (and the complexity of pricing for that matter).
I don't know where you got this meme from, but it's hugely dishonest. You got manipulated by somebody.
The price of Fuji Apples in Washington State is 1.28lb.
Or how about you name something, that is tied to the price of minimum wage, where we can see in the data that as minimum wage go up, it must go up. The price of something, anything.
You have to look at processed stuff, like butter/cheese/ho-hos/etc, because the factories for the most part have a much harder time hiding illegal labor.
It's a very complex question, and the supply chain is so long that no individual part will have an instant effect on the end price. But you can be certain that it will have an effect.