Well, we don't have to worry about Kerry increasing the minimum wage, do we. At least not unless the Democrats do amazingly well in mid-term elections in 2006.
BPSCG said:
So if the minimum wage doesn't enable you to buy food, clothing, and shelter, what's the point?
Then it needs to be higher
If I find an employer who's willing to pay me $3.00 an hour to put stamps on envelopes and that's as hard as I want to work after retirement, why should you care?
Most minimum wage laws have lots of exceptions in them to accomodate cases like this. For example, part time workers are frequently exempt. Very young people are exempt. Independent contractors are exempt. That's probably where you would fall. You would probably not agree to $3.00 per hour. You would agree to $3.00 per 100 envelopes, or something, where an average worker could stuff 200 envelopes per hour. At your leisurely, semi-retired pace, you would get $3.00 an hour, but the law would not be broken.
The minimum wage laws are designed to protect people who are trying to earn their living, and plenty of loopholes exist for people who are doing other things, besides trying to make a living.
Why should there be a law that says it makes no difference what the employer and I agree on?
Agree. That's an odd word. Would anyone ever freely make an agreement, the result of which is a guaranteed life of poverty? If the minimum wage is set fairly, then that is what will happen if someone agrees to a wage that is less than minimum wage.
The fact that so many people around the world do in fact accept such agreements is proof that true freedom is not found in the mere absence of legal restrictions.
Go back to my envelope-stamping job. If a prospective employer tells me he has an envelope stamping machine that costs him $4.00 an hour to run, why should I be prohibited from doing that job for him for $3.00?
As I said before, I believe that every able-bodied, non mentally handicapped person is capable of doing work that would allow him to survive at a decent level. Do you disagree?
If that is the case, then, you won't accept such a position if that is your only means of support. You have to make a living, and that job won't do it. Therefore, the only possibile way this situation arises is if an artificial shortage of opportunities has been created. One way to guarantee an end to that shortage is to not allow people to profit from paying you sub-living wages. Make him pay $4.00 an hour to run his machine, and someone will find a way to harness your abilities at the minimum wage.
What if the employer says he can send the envelopes to Carjackistan, have them stamped, and have them sent back to him for $4.00?
Carjackistan is, presumably, a place where there is no minimum wage. Wouldn't it be nice if we could all live freely, negotiating whatever compensation was fair for our labor, just like they do in Carjackistan?
But why should labor be treated differently from any other cost of doing business? Why is it okay for government to fix the price of labor, but not for rent?
Because the building doesn't have to eat.
Kerry proposes a 37% increase in the minimum wage. Why doesn't he instead propose that all businesses cut their prices by 37%? What would be wrong with that?
It wouldn't accomplish anything. A 37% price cut would be more or less identical to demanding a 37% pay raise for all employees. A 37% increase in the minimum wage only affects the lowest paid employees.
Allowing the stoner to work for $3.00 an hour satisfies the stoner and the employer. What's wrong with that?
Does it "satisfy" the stoner? If $3.00 an hour can't create a decent living condition, he might accept it, but he can't live on it. Therefore, either the government will provide extra money to him, or he will steal it. Or, option 3, his health will fail.
If you are allowed to pay him $3.00 an hour, his worth is probably worth $3.10 an hour. You will hire 100 stoners, and make $10.00 an hour, and society will have to accept the consequences of having 100 underfed stoners on the streets.