Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think anyone who has the same knee-jerk reaction every single time we discuss raising the federal minimum wage should not be taken seriously when they make the same exact tires arguments without backing them up with current research. It’s not meant to never change. It has to change as the economy changes. We should be debating how much it goes up and what indicators to tie it to, not whether it needs to go up at all. Because it obviously does. Half of the workforce making under 15 an hour is insane.
Frankly, I don't think the govt. should be setting a minimum wage.
If a person cannot afford to live on a wage offered to him/her, then that person should seek a job elsewhere. If the businesses offering low wages cannot find workers, they will raise their wages.
Of course, this depends on NOT having low wage workers flooding our country from south of our border.
You realize that under Trump, wages rose and this was in large part due to our border enforcement. Sadly, that has now changed.
Since our economy is dominated by effective monopolies, this does not work. If they break up the big corporations and strongly enforce anti-monopoly laws, this might work.
![]()
![]()
![]()
Who are these monopolies that you speak of and how do they have a monopoly in the hiring of labor near minimum wage levels.
Not the Pp, but when the only employer in town is Walmart, it’s an effective monopoly. Which is why we have minimum wage laws to begin with. We don’t need anti-trust, just floors for what we deem is an acceptable and not unconscionable bargain between an employee and an employer.
Show me a town where the only employer there is Walmart. Go ahead, I'm open-minded enough to learn of such a town.
There are TONS of little places where a downtown commercial district was completely gutted by a WalMart opening.
I’ll give you one example I saw happen in real-time: Bedford, VA. I grew up there.
Prior to a WalMart supercenter openning up, the downtown commercial corridor in Bedford had: a pharmacy, a grocery store, a furniture store, a fabric sewing and vacuum store, an optician, an appliance store, a sporting goods-hunting-guns-bait shop, a phone and computer store, a dress shop, a toy store, a bike shop, a bakery, a hardware store, a book store, a VA ABC store, a shoe store, a tire and car repair shop, and several restaurants.
Within two years, everything except the VA ABC and the tire shop were gone.
This isn’t debatable. This happened to MY little town, where I grew up. I. Watched. It. Happen.
If you want to open a discussion about the impact of Wal-Mart on small-town economy, go open such a thread. The discussion here is around the claim that there is a "monopoly" of labor demand. To show just how idiotic this claim is, I challenged for someone, anyone, to show an example of such a monopoly, and the response is "Wal-Mart". Regardless of Wal-Mart's effect on Bedford, VA, or any other similar small town, they do not have a monopoly on the labor demand in those small towns. Just a quick search of jobs in Bedford, VA:
https://www.google.com/search?q=jobs+bedford+va&rlz=1C1CHBF_enUS737US737&oq=jobs+bedford+va&aqs=chrome..69i57j0i22i30l9.2458j0j4&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8&ibp=htl;jobs&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwj0qqbI-9ruAhVBVTUKHa7KCQoQudcGKAN6BAgDEC4&sxsrf=ALeKk01e0WZyjO1oCpq1N6jMGF_vXbitvw:1612810568711#htivrt=jobs&htidocid=H93lg8WQXApyFr1OAAAAAA%3D%3D&fpstate=tldetail
While a few of the jobs listed are certainly from Wal-Mart, it certainly doesn't look anything like a monopoly. In fact, Bedford County does not even list Wal-Mart among its top employers:
https://www.bedfordareachamber.com/economic-development/
Anyone who thinks Wal-Mart or any other company has a monopoly on the demand for labor is ignorant of the facts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Less than 2 percent of hourly workers in the U.S. are paid the $7.25 minimum wage or less. Most employers, even most retail, food, and service businesses, already know they have to pay more than the current minimum wage to recruit and retain good workers. Businesses that insist on paying the minimum wage complain that they have high employee turnover and spend a lot of their time hiring and training new employees, but they are too stupid and/or too cheap to pay a little more to keep their productive workers.
The main effect of the minimum wage increase would be for those currently making $10 to $15 per hour. That is a much larger segment of wage earners than the minimum wage workers. The $10 to $15 group is full of women who are underpaid for the quality and responsibility of the work they perform.
You need to get your logic straight, do businesses know or not that they have to pay good enough wages to recruit and retain good workers? How can they know this at the minimum wage level, but all of a sudden lose their logic in the $10-$15 level? I mean, when you go out looking for wine, are you suddenly unwilling to pay a fair price for a $15 bottle while you were perfectly willing to pay for a $9 bottle? How does that logic work in your mind?
I guess if you are buying 100 bottles of wine for a party, you might then consider whether or not the difference in cost is worth it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Less than 2 percent of hourly workers in the U.S. are paid the $7.25 minimum wage or less. Most employers, even most retail, food, and service businesses, already know they have to pay more than the current minimum wage to recruit and retain good workers. Businesses that insist on paying the minimum wage complain that they have high employee turnover and spend a lot of their time hiring and training new employees, but they are too stupid and/or too cheap to pay a little more to keep their productive workers.
The main effect of the minimum wage increase would be for those currently making $10 to $15 per hour. That is a much larger segment of wage earners than the minimum wage workers. The $10 to $15 group is full of women who are underpaid for the quality and responsibility of the work they perform.
You need to get your logic straight, do businesses know or not that they have to pay good enough wages to recruit and retain good workers? How can they know this at the minimum wage level, but all of a sudden lose their logic in the $10-$15 level? I mean, when you go out looking for wine, are you suddenly unwilling to pay a fair price for a $15 bottle while you were perfectly willing to pay for a $9 bottle? How does that logic work in your mind?
Employers know they need to pay more the $7.25 to get and keep good workers because there are other employers who will pay up to $10/hr for reliable and productive workers. But the $10/hr employers know that they don't have to pay much higher than $12/hr even as their employees become more productive and take on more responsibility, because the labor market as a whole undervalues and underpays service workers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think anyone who has the same knee-jerk reaction every single time we discuss raising the federal minimum wage should not be taken seriously when they make the same exact tires arguments without backing them up with current research. It’s not meant to never change. It has to change as the economy changes. We should be debating how much it goes up and what indicators to tie it to, not whether it needs to go up at all. Because it obviously does. Half of the workforce making under 15 an hour is insane.
Frankly, I don't think the govt. should be setting a minimum wage.
If a person cannot afford to live on a wage offered to him/her, then that person should seek a job elsewhere. If the businesses offering low wages cannot find workers, they will raise their wages.
Of course, this depends on NOT having low wage workers flooding our country from south of our border.
You realize that under Trump, wages rose and this was in large part due to our border enforcement. Sadly, that has now changed.
Since our economy is dominated by effective monopolies, this does not work. If they break up the big corporations and strongly enforce anti-monopoly laws, this might work.
![]()
![]()
![]()
Who are these monopolies that you speak of and how do they have a monopoly in the hiring of labor near minimum wage levels.
Not the Pp, but when the only employer in town is Walmart, it’s an effective monopoly. Which is why we have minimum wage laws to begin with. We don’t need anti-trust, just floors for what we deem is an acceptable and not unconscionable bargain between an employee and an employer.
Show me a town where the only employer there is Walmart. Go ahead, I'm open-minded enough to learn of such a town.
There are TONS of little places where a downtown commercial district was completely gutted by a WalMart opening.
I’ll give you one example I saw happen in real-time: Bedford, VA. I grew up there.
Prior to a WalMart supercenter openning up, the downtown commercial corridor in Bedford had: a pharmacy, a grocery store, a furniture store, a fabric sewing and vacuum store, an optician, an appliance store, a sporting goods-hunting-guns-bait shop, a phone and computer store, a dress shop, a toy store, a bike shop, a bakery, a hardware store, a book store, a VA ABC store, a shoe store, a tire and car repair shop, and several restaurants.
Within two years, everything except the VA ABC and the tire shop were gone.
This isn’t debatable. This happened to MY little town, where I grew up. I. Watched. It. Happen.
If you want to open a discussion about the impact of Wal-Mart on small-town economy, go open such a thread. The discussion here is around the claim that there is a "monopoly" of labor demand. To show just how idiotic this claim is, I challenged for someone, anyone, to show an example of such a monopoly, and the response is "Wal-Mart". Regardless of Wal-Mart's effect on Bedford, VA, or any other similar small town, they do not have a monopoly on the labor demand in those small towns. Just a quick search of jobs in Bedford, VA:
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think anyone who has the same knee-jerk reaction every single time we discuss raising the federal minimum wage should not be taken seriously when they make the same exact tires arguments without backing them up with current research. It’s not meant to never change. It has to change as the economy changes. We should be debating how much it goes up and what indicators to tie it to, not whether it needs to go up at all. Because it obviously does. Half of the workforce making under 15 an hour is insane.
Frankly, I don't think the govt. should be setting a minimum wage.
If a person cannot afford to live on a wage offered to him/her, then that person should seek a job elsewhere. If the businesses offering low wages cannot find workers, they will raise their wages.
Of course, this depends on NOT having low wage workers flooding our country from south of our border.
You realize that under Trump, wages rose and this was in large part due to our border enforcement. Sadly, that has now changed.
Since our economy is dominated by effective monopolies, this does not work. If they break up the big corporations and strongly enforce anti-monopoly laws, this might work.
![]()
![]()
![]()
Who are these monopolies that you speak of and how do they have a monopoly in the hiring of labor near minimum wage levels.
Not the Pp, but when the only employer in town is Walmart, it’s an effective monopoly. Which is why we have minimum wage laws to begin with. We don’t need anti-trust, just floors for what we deem is an acceptable and not unconscionable bargain between an employee and an employer.
Show me a town where the only employer there is Walmart. Go ahead, I'm open-minded enough to learn of such a town.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Less than 2 percent of hourly workers in the U.S. are paid the $7.25 minimum wage or less. Most employers, even most retail, food, and service businesses, already know they have to pay more than the current minimum wage to recruit and retain good workers. Businesses that insist on paying the minimum wage complain that they have high employee turnover and spend a lot of their time hiring and training new employees, but they are too stupid and/or too cheap to pay a little more to keep their productive workers.
The main effect of the minimum wage increase would be for those currently making $10 to $15 per hour. That is a much larger segment of wage earners than the minimum wage workers. The $10 to $15 group is full of women who are underpaid for the quality and responsibility of the work they perform.
You need to get your logic straight, do businesses know or not that they have to pay good enough wages to recruit and retain good workers? How can they know this at the minimum wage level, but all of a sudden lose their logic in the $10-$15 level? I mean, when you go out looking for wine, are you suddenly unwilling to pay a fair price for a $15 bottle while you were perfectly willing to pay for a $9 bottle? How does that logic work in your mind?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Less than 2 percent of hourly workers in the U.S. are paid the $7.25 minimum wage or less. Most employers, even most retail, food, and service businesses, already know they have to pay more than the current minimum wage to recruit and retain good workers. Businesses that insist on paying the minimum wage complain that they have high employee turnover and spend a lot of their time hiring and training new employees, but they are too stupid and/or too cheap to pay a little more to keep their productive workers.
The main effect of the minimum wage increase would be for those currently making $10 to $15 per hour. That is a much larger segment of wage earners than the minimum wage workers. The $10 to $15 group is full of women who are underpaid for the quality and responsibility of the work they perform.
You need to get your logic straight, do businesses know or not that they have to pay good enough wages to recruit and retain good workers? How can they know this at the minimum wage level, but all of a sudden lose their logic in the $10-$15 level? I mean, when you go out looking for wine, are you suddenly unwilling to pay a fair price for a $15 bottle while you were perfectly willing to pay for a $9 bottle? How does that logic work in your mind?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think anyone who has the same knee-jerk reaction every single time we discuss raising the federal minimum wage should not be taken seriously when they make the same exact tires arguments without backing them up with current research. It’s not meant to never change. It has to change as the economy changes. We should be debating how much it goes up and what indicators to tie it to, not whether it needs to go up at all. Because it obviously does. Half of the workforce making under 15 an hour is insane.
Frankly, I don't think the govt. should be setting a minimum wage.
If a person cannot afford to live on a wage offered to him/her, then that person should seek a job elsewhere. If the businesses offering low wages cannot find workers, they will raise their wages.
Of course, this depends on NOT having low wage workers flooding our country from south of our border.
You realize that under Trump, wages rose and this was in large part due to our border enforcement. Sadly, that has now changed.
Since our economy is dominated by effective monopolies, this does not work. If they break up the big corporations and strongly enforce anti-monopoly laws, this might work.
![]()
![]()
![]()
Who are these monopolies that you speak of and how do they have a monopoly in the hiring of labor near minimum wage levels.
Not the Pp, but when the only employer in town is Walmart, it’s an effective monopoly. Which is why we have minimum wage laws to begin with. We don’t need anti-trust, just floors for what we deem is an acceptable and not unconscionable bargain between an employee and an employer.
Show me a town where the only employer there is Walmart. Go ahead, I'm open-minded enough to learn of such a town.
Anonymous wrote:Less than 2 percent of hourly workers in the U.S. are paid the $7.25 minimum wage or less. Most employers, even most retail, food, and service businesses, already know they have to pay more than the current minimum wage to recruit and retain good workers. Businesses that insist on paying the minimum wage complain that they have high employee turnover and spend a lot of their time hiring and training new employees, but they are too stupid and/or too cheap to pay a little more to keep their productive workers.
The main effect of the minimum wage increase would be for those currently making $10 to $15 per hour. That is a much larger segment of wage earners than the minimum wage workers. The $10 to $15 group is full of women who are underpaid for the quality and responsibility of the work they perform.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think anyone who has the same knee-jerk reaction every single time we discuss raising the federal minimum wage should not be taken seriously when they make the same exact tires arguments without backing them up with current research. It’s not meant to never change. It has to change as the economy changes. We should be debating how much it goes up and what indicators to tie it to, not whether it needs to go up at all. Because it obviously does. Half of the workforce making under 15 an hour is insane.
Frankly, I don't think the govt. should be setting a minimum wage.
If a person cannot afford to live on a wage offered to him/her, then that person should seek a job elsewhere. If the businesses offering low wages cannot find workers, they will raise their wages.
Of course, this depends on NOT having low wage workers flooding our country from south of our border.
You realize that under Trump, wages rose and this was in large part due to our border enforcement. Sadly, that has now changed.
Since our economy is dominated by effective monopolies, this does not work. If they break up the big corporations and strongly enforce anti-monopoly laws, this might work.
![]()
![]()
![]()
Who are these monopolies that you speak of and how do they have a monopoly in the hiring of labor near minimum wage levels.
Not the Pp, but when the only employer in town is Walmart, it’s an effective monopoly. Which is why we have minimum wage laws to begin with. We don’t need anti-trust, just floors for what we deem is an acceptable and not unconscionable bargain between an employee and an employer.
Anonymous wrote:Less than 2 percent of hourly workers in the U.S. are paid the $7.25 minimum wage or less. Most employers, even most retail, food, and service businesses, already know they have to pay more than the current minimum wage to recruit and retain good workers. Businesses that insist on paying the minimum wage complain that they have high employee turnover and spend a lot of their time hiring and training new employees, but they are too stupid and/or too cheap to pay a little more to keep their productive workers.
The main effect of the minimum wage increase would be for those currently making $10 to $15 per hour. That is a much larger segment of wage earners than the minimum wage workers. The $10 to $15 group is full of women who are underpaid for the quality and responsibility of the work they perform.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think anyone who has the same knee-jerk reaction every single time we discuss raising the federal minimum wage should not be taken seriously when they make the same exact tires arguments without backing them up with current research. It’s not meant to never change. It has to change as the economy changes. We should be debating how much it goes up and what indicators to tie it to, not whether it needs to go up at all. Because it obviously does. Half of the workforce making under 15 an hour is insane.
Frankly, I don't think the govt. should be setting a minimum wage.
If a person cannot afford to live on a wage offered to him/her, then that person should seek a job elsewhere. If the businesses offering low wages cannot find workers, they will raise their wages.
Of course, this depends on NOT having low wage workers flooding our country from south of our border.
You realize that under Trump, wages rose and this was in large part due to our border enforcement. Sadly, that has now changed.
Since our economy is dominated by effective monopolies, this does not work. If they break up the big corporations and strongly enforce anti-monopoly laws, this might work.
![]()
![]()
![]()
Who are these monopolies that you speak of and how do they have a monopoly in the hiring of labor near minimum wage levels.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think anyone who has the same knee-jerk reaction every single time we discuss raising the federal minimum wage should not be taken seriously when they make the same exact tires arguments without backing them up with current research. It’s not meant to never change. It has to change as the economy changes. We should be debating how much it goes up and what indicators to tie it to, not whether it needs to go up at all. Because it obviously does. Half of the workforce making under 15 an hour is insane.
Frankly, I don't think the govt. should be setting a minimum wage.
If a person cannot afford to live on a wage offered to him/her, then that person should seek a job elsewhere. If the businesses offering low wages cannot find workers, they will raise their wages.
Of course, this depends on NOT having low wage workers flooding our country from south of our border.
You realize that under Trump, wages rose and this was in large part due to our border enforcement. Sadly, that has now changed.
Since our economy is dominated by effective monopolies, this does not work. If they break up the big corporations and strongly enforce anti-monopoly laws, this might work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm sorry you find having to pay your employees a living wage so confounding.
Telling that you assume that anyone arguing for the business owner is a business owner.
Far from it. My dad started a business that didn't succeed. He paid his employees when he was not paying himself. He sold the business to someone who had the capital to invest. Because of capital, the business became successful. Took dad years to get back on his feet financially. It was his dream, and it didn't work out for him. But, that is why I know how hard starting a business can be. Spouse and I have only worked for others. I never had any desire to start a business--I know how hard it is to make a buck. You obviously do not.
I actually am a business owner. And I don't have any employees yet, because I wouldn't be able to pay them what I feel is fair. Instead I do a lot of the work myself, and I hire contractors for specific tasks within projects.
The business owner is not entitled to the success that comes from building a business AT THE EXPENSE of paying their employees a living wage. I really don't understand why that's so hard for you to grasp.