In the age of partisan hostility, Id like to take a step back and discuss a few key issues in our political system by presenting them with a relatively balanced framing. The first topic Im going to attempt to frame is the minimum wage. Having a nuanced/complete view of the issue will positively effect everyone.
I know that most people on this board are left-leaning (myself included). Please completely engage with the argument against the minimum wage. Give it a fair shake.
Should we increase the minimum wage to $15 an hour?
Yes
Now, what actually happens in the real world? The arguments for minimum wage are often made in terms of intention, not results. I think we all want the same thing: we want to reduce the amount of poor people, and we want people to be treated justly. What's the best way to do this? What do economists/people say?
Economic Research The Effects of Minimum Wage on Employment
Department of Labor Mythbusters The Minimum Wage
Economic Policies Institute Survey of US Economists
What a minimum wage means for women and workers of color
I also recommend just watching the discussions of economists for arguments against the minimum wage (Milton Friedman, Thomas Sowell, many more). If anything, the best judgement for the efficacy of a minimum wage is through the lens of economics, not the lens of social policy. Most economists against the minimum wage believe that the minimum wage harms the poor more severely.
Ill also provide a quote from Robert Reich, a brilliant man in favor of the minimum wage. Note: Robert Reich is an expert in social policy, not economics. He believes the minimum wage will boost the amount of jobs by increasing the spending power of the middle class.
Finally, a great article from the Atlantic (by far my favorite journalism source on the internet) that explores and fairly represents both sides of the issue: Should we raise the minimum wage? 11 questions and answers.
I hope to have represented both sides fairly & accurately. I started my research with the framing that a $15 minimum wage is obviously the right decision. I finish it by being markedly unsure.
The Question
Mosts economists agree in the following: minimum wage will decrease poverty for a segment of individuals. The real question is - is the trade-off worth it? Does it benefit the middle class moreso than the poor? Is there a better solution to help the poor than establishing a minimum wage? (the most common idea is the earned income tax credit)
I know that most people on this board are left-leaning (myself included). Please completely engage with the argument against the minimum wage. Give it a fair shake.
Should we increase the minimum wage to $15 an hour?
Yes
- We need to pay low income workers a living wage, not a minimum wage
- Can't justify CEO salaries if employees are paid a pittance
- Wealth is dramatically concentrated in the top 1%, need more money in the 99% to stimulate spending and economy.
- Will reduce the amount of available jobs - employers can't afford to keep the same workforce
- Will set a skill floor - a job now has a minimum value. Those with lower skills or education will no longer be qualified to work
- Reduces economic mobility of lower skilled workers - the real minimum wage is always zero.
Now, what actually happens in the real world? The arguments for minimum wage are often made in terms of intention, not results. I think we all want the same thing: we want to reduce the amount of poor people, and we want people to be treated justly. What's the best way to do this? What do economists/people say?
Economic Research The Effects of Minimum Wage on Employment
Department of Labor Mythbusters The Minimum Wage
Economic Policies Institute Survey of US Economists
What a minimum wage means for women and workers of color
I also recommend just watching the discussions of economists for arguments against the minimum wage (Milton Friedman, Thomas Sowell, many more). If anything, the best judgement for the efficacy of a minimum wage is through the lens of economics, not the lens of social policy. Most economists against the minimum wage believe that the minimum wage harms the poor more severely.
Thomas Sowell said:The minimum wage law very cleverly is misnamed. The real minimum wage is zero. That is what many inexperienced and low skilled people receive as a result of legislation that makes it illegal to pay them what they are currently worth to an employer.
Ill also provide a quote from Robert Reich, a brilliant man in favor of the minimum wage. Note: Robert Reich is an expert in social policy, not economics. He believes the minimum wage will boost the amount of jobs by increasing the spending power of the middle class.
Robert Reich said:If the minimum wage in 1968 had simply kept up with inflation it would be more than $10 today. If it also kept up with the added productivity of American workers since then, it would be more than $21 an hour
More money in people's pockets means more demand for goods and services, which means more jobs not fewer jobs.
Finally, a great article from the Atlantic (by far my favorite journalism source on the internet) that explores and fairly represents both sides of the issue: Should we raise the minimum wage? 11 questions and answers.
I hope to have represented both sides fairly & accurately. I started my research with the framing that a $15 minimum wage is obviously the right decision. I finish it by being markedly unsure.
The Question
Mosts economists agree in the following: minimum wage will decrease poverty for a segment of individuals. The real question is - is the trade-off worth it? Does it benefit the middle class moreso than the poor? Is there a better solution to help the poor than establishing a minimum wage? (the most common idea is the earned income tax credit)