Here comes the longest post in VolNation history, but its the last one Im making in this thread and will hopefully answer any potential questions (although of course it wont).
Reading this thread has been highly edifying. I admit I'm no expert on the matter of minimum wage and don't write checks, therefore my opinion is somewhat negated, according to the Volerazzi, as I like to think of some of you.
I've learned a lot by reading this thread, and some of my opinions have even been changed.
Still, when I look at something, say foreign policy, geopolitics, or economy, as little as I know about any of these things, I like to think macro. Not micro. I like to think about what are the costs accrued to us all and not just a McDonald's franchise owner with a 2.5 million per year business that assumes prices are static while wages only go up and s/he is jack out of ****. (Very unrealistic scenario but apparently scary to some self-proclaimed marketing professors.)
The fact of the matter is, our minimum wage earners (and this wasn't necessarily intended as a referendum on minimum wage increase as much as it was what the value of the minimum wage is
period, but leave it up to the I dont want to pay peons any more cents for my Big Mac group to make it into that.) tend to consist of two groups: the young/uneducated/unskilled and the not necessarily so young (25 and beyond)/uneducated/unskilled. No neither one of these groups should earn much, certainly not more than a college graduate or a skilled, trained worker.
But consider the following when you think about minimum wage, despite all your micro-business, microeconomics how will this affect my business if prices and wages remain static according to my economic overlords who make more than me?, "how will this affect my summer home?" or how will this affect how rich people have told me to think about such things, even though I dont make much myself, but they sure sound purty? sense:
(Keep in mind, this is all assuming prices and wages move according to demand and inflation, unlike what has happened in reality and what our economic overlords, I write the check so Im smarter than you, stupid wealthy want you to believe.)
1. Youth (most likely 16-24 range) compose the majority of fast food service. Higher wages (and I'm not talking about $15/hour, as I've already specified) for this group will do at least one of the following:
a) Help them save and plan better for college, if they plan on attending. This means lower student loan debts and lower overall US debt.
b) Help them contribute more to the local economy. These are the kids who have no intention on going to college and, in turn, have to use to money they gain to put back into the local economy.
So, we have savings on one hand (which isnt currently injected back into the economy but will eventually) and immediate spending on the other. Okay. So all the money goes back in one way or the other.
Whats the problem then? The wages arent immediately injected back into your business or franchise? I dont get it.
2. Not so youthful compose a good deal, albeit the minority. Since neoliberals (savvy businessmen) sold our country out for their pocketbooks, weve lost our manufacturing base, so unskilled/uneducated labor is now in the fast food industry, predominantly. As my mother, who works in a DSS will tell you (and shes no liberal by any means), the majority of clients are really only capable of working fast food. Theyre either too dumb or too inhibited (too many children, etc. often the two go hand in hand.) And, as we know, the service workforce needs these people, or else it could just as easily satiate itself on the youth (who never seem to lack a fast food job). Some can go on and get educated/skilled, but the majority will always be confined to low skill labor. These are, per capita, our biggest welfare pullers, save maybe the disabled or the elderly. But work-eligible, certainly.
So were paying them either in our tax dollars or in our prices. Its your call. If you dont like the entitlement system, thats understandable. Its certainly not perfect. But unless you welcome a somewhat substantial percentage of our population (maybe around 2-5 percent, which doesnt sound like much, until you do the numbers) roaming around the streets and constantly begging for **** from you, than you need to decide whether you like higher minimum wages, the current welfare system, or Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. Just figured Id throw that in there.