Darth Crater wrote:NiteRunner81 wrote:So California State Rep Barbara Lee wants to increase California's Minimum Wage to $26 an hour.
That's completely ridiculous at the current time and has no chance of passing. Hopefully she knows that, and it was just hyperbole.
Apparently the minimum wage there is currently $8/hr, though. In my opinion a bit ridiculous in the opposite direction.
NiteRunner81 wrote:Most of these debates end with "well, this is ALL I qualify for!" Well, maybe if you had got some education, made better life choices, not got knocked up as a high schooler, not did drugs, just maybe you could qualify for something that pays more. Minimum Skills, Minimum Education, Minimum Qualifications EARNS you MINIMUM WAGE!!!
Is it fair to punish people for choices that they made at the age of 16-20, when their brains were literally not fully developed yet? Maybe we should try to make it easier for older people to improve their prospects. Anyone know if education loans are currently restricted by age or not?
NiteRunner81 wrote:These same people don't believe that the increase in minimum wage correlates to inflation.
Well, the minimum wage absolutely
should correlate to inflation, since it should be based on quality of life rather than on a dollar value. If you're saying that minimum wage increases
cause inflation... I'd be interested in seeing the math on that. I don't see how it actually adds more money to the economy, but I'm not dismissing the idea out of hand.
hey crater, just letting you know, there is some truth to what you are saying, but Nite's comment is also partially right. If i remember correctly, minimum wage does
cause inflation. There are different types of inflation. There is demand inflation, and cost-push inflation. Cost-push inflation is when something is pushing the cost of producing something... in this case, a wage increase is pushing prices up because the cost is being passed to consumers. A car factory has to pay more to workers, so cars become more expensive. Inflation is not always caused because the government is injecting money into the economy. However, if the government approves a "common sense" minimum wage increase, then the effect on inflation would be almost negligible. If it is a totally crazy increase (like the 26 bucks per hour), then that would cause some serious inflation. But back to a "common sense" wage increase... sometimes workers might actually have some real gain, but it really depends on where you live and overall prices there.
also, a minimum wage can cause unemployment if it is raised above the equilibrium price of labor. If it is too high then factories will pay the higher wage, but will hire less. If the minimum wage is too low, then won't make any difference because the market will already pay above that. An example of minimum wage in the economy (above the equilibrium price):
see the graph. It says Market Wage is in point E. Imagine the market wage is $6. If minimum wage is put at an imaginary $7 then that would cause unemployment because the minimum wage is above what companies want to pay (the part where the minimum wage line hits the demand line). When that happens, you see the quantity of labor demanded is less than at point E.
so it is true... that minimum wage causes inflation (negligible) and
could cause unemployment. But... sometimes people claim that we should live without a minimum wage so that everyone can have a job. That statement is also misleading. In theory everyone
would have a job, but in real life it seems that is not the case since there are places without minimum wage and still have unemployment (and those employed have miserable salaries).