POL Does Raising Wages Hurt or Harm Job Creation

dstraito

TB Fanatic
Why Raising The Minimum Wage Kills Jobs




The minimum wage is a major anti-jobs policy. Ten states have announced an increase in their minimum wage effective January 1, mostly because their legislation requires an adjustment to the Consumer Price Index inflation measure. Some political jurisdictions take it further, San Francisco has a minimum over $10 per hour and the state of Washington is above $9 on average. Supporters hail this as a victory for “fairness” and a benefit for poor people. This, it is alleged, will provide more income to support spending and stimulate the economy. If it works that well, why not make the minimum $50? This would provide someone working 2,000 hours a year an income of $100,000, eliminating poverty and stimulating the economy. Obviously, $50/hour would be detrimental to employment as is $7/hour, it’s just a matter of degree.




The President of the Greater New York Chamber of Commerce suggested that the higher labor cost could be offset by eliminating waste in other aspects of the business. Really? So employers are wasting money that they could eliminate and add to the bottom line but they chose not to, to earn less than they could if waste was eliminated. But, with a higher minimum wage they will suddenly eliminate that waste to cover higher labor costs, adding nothing to the bottom line?


This is the kind of absurd thinking that leads to bad policy.




As a poverty program, raising the minimum wage is like killing flies with a shotgun, not very well targeted. About 60% of the officially poor don’t work, so the only thing raising the minimum wage does for them is to make it harder for them to get a job if they ever decide they want one.


Workers must bring at least as much value to the firm as they are paid or the firm will fail and all jobs will be lost (no GM bailouts are available to our 6 million small employers that employ half of our private sector workforce). Raising the minimum wage raises the hurdle a worker must cross to justify being hired.




It is estimated that less than 15% of the total increase in wages resulting from an increase in the minimum will go to people below the poverty line and less than a third of those receiving the minimum wage are families below the poverty line.


Most minimum wage workers are from above median income families. So, most of the people benefiting from the minimum wage are not the intended targets of the “anti-poverty” aspect of raising the minimum wage.




As a jobs program, raising the minimum wage is a real loser. Congress raised the minimum wage 10.6% in July, 2009 (know of anyone else getting a raise then?). In the ensuring 6 months, nearly 600,000 teen jobs disappeared, even with nearly 4% growth in the economy, this compared to a loss of 250,000 jobs in the first half of the year as GDP growth declined by 4%


Why? When you raise the price of anything, people take less of it, including labor. The unemployment rate for teens remains unacceptably high. Workers of all ages that are relatively unskilled are adversely impacted by this policy.



Another argument in favor of the minimum wage is that it is a stimulus, introducing new income and spending into the market. But was there more income to spend in 2009 when nearly 600,000 teen jobs were lost? Common sense says that every dollar a minimum wage worker receives must have come out of somebody else’s pocket, either small business owners or their customers. The money for a higher minimum wage does not come from thin air.


Consider a community based pizza parlor selling 100 pies a day for 360 days at $10 each. Total revenue is $360,000. It employs 10 minimum wage workers earning $7 per hour, working 2000 hours a year, making labor costs $140,000. Assume rent, utilities, equipment, depreciation, insurance, supplies, licenses, and food costs come to $170,000 per year, leaving a profit of $50,000 for the owner and his/her family.


Raising the minimum wage $1 would raise labor costs by $20,000 (paying more for the same amount of labor) and reduce profit to $30,000. The owner must either move into a smaller house or raise prices, which reduces the demand for pizza, resulting in the loss of a worker. So, the full increase in the wage cost of an increase in the minimum wage comes out of the pockets of customers or the owner’s family, and the one person who loses a job. There was no net gain in income to increase spending in the community served as every dollar the minimum wage workers received came out of someone else’s pocket in the community.




Supporters of raising the minimum cite poorly done studies by agenda driven “research” groups that allege to show that raising the minimum doesn’t harm employment. This defines common sense and is not supported by good academic research. The Law of Demand always works: the higher the price of anything, the less that will be taken, and this includes labor.




Firms cannot pay a worker more than the value the worker brings to the firm. Raising the minimum denies more low skilled workers the opportunity to get a job and receive “on the job” training. The impact of raising the minimum wage in 2009 on teen employment makes it very clear that this is especially harmful for young teen workers looking for their first opportunity to have a job. Raising the cost of labor raises the incentive for employers to find ways to use less labor.


Most minimum wage earners are not in poverty, yet their employment opportunities are impaired as well as those who are. This is but one of the poorly designed policies that are created by politicians who have little or no understanding of how business works. They promise higher legislated wages or other benefits to constituents who don’t understand the true economic impact in order to gain votes.


from http://www.forbes.com/sites/williamdunkelberg/2012/12/31/why-raising-the-minimum-wage-kills-jobs
 

SIRR1

Deceased
From what I understand is when the minimum wage is raised it take away money from business owners and keeps them from hiring additional employees, but by raising the minimum wage your providing more income for your base employees giving them a larger paycheck raising their standard of living...

It all depends which way you lean politically!

The GOP wants smaller paychecks with more people working and the Asses want everything, higher wages, more employees and health and welfare for all workers.

SIRR1
 

Ice Guy

Inactive
Raising the minimum wage is nothing but a redistributive tax on business owners that allows politicians to say "see, we didn't raise taxes"
 

Garryowen

Deceased
Wages are a measure of goods and services. If you raise wages without increasing productivity, you simply circulate more dollars but they represent the same amount of goods and services. So forcing wages higher has the same effect as printing fiat money: inflation and destruction of savings. It will also eliminate jobs for unskilled workers. No matter how much you are forced to pay employees, customers will only pay so much for your products. That's how insurance companies can double rates: the government is forcing people to buy their product.
 

dstraito

TB Fanatic
Wages are a measure of goods and services. If you raise wages without increasing productivity, you simply circulate more dollars but they represent the same amount of goods and services. So forcing wages higher has the same effect as printing fiat money: inflation and destruction of savings. It will also eliminate jobs for unskilled workers. No matter how much you are forced to pay employees, customers will only pay so much for your products. That's how insurance companies can double rates: the government is forcing people to buy their product.

very well stated
 

TerryK

TB Fanatic
Wages are a measure of goods and services. If you raise wages without increasing productivity, you simply circulate more dollars but they represent the same amount of goods and services. So forcing wages higher has the same effect as printing fiat money: inflation and destruction of savings. It will also eliminate jobs for unskilled workers. No matter how much you are forced to pay employees, customers will only pay so much for your products. That's how insurance companies can double rates: the government is forcing people to buy their product.

Very good explanation :applaud:
Perhaps that best and most succinct explanation I have heard here.
 
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Pinecone

Has No Life - Lives on TB
The higher the wages, the more taxes are paid by both employee and employer. The employer will pay about 25% above the wage for SSI, Medicare, Unemployment, etc. It also takes away an employer's ability to reward the hard work of its best employees by giving them a raise, when the government gives a raise to all employees. There is only so much an employer can spend on wages, and the best employees can lose out because minimum wages are so high.
Pinecone
 
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