Anonymous wrote:Of course. My brother is on the brink of homelessness because he won't just got get a job at target.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think that you can raise wages of farm workers considerably without the price of milk going to $10 per gallon.
Milk is about $2.50 per gallon now. Simple economic logic suggests that you could DOUBLE the current wages of farm workers, and let's even entertain the ridiculous assumption that 100% of the cost of milk is due to labor. Even then, which is a ridiculous scenario, it would be $5 per gallon.
More likely, you could double the wages of farm workers and it might go from $2.50 to $3.25, at most.
$2.50?
Where do you buy milk?
No kidding? The generic non organic at Teeter is $4/gallon.
You must like getting ripped off.
The milk at H Teets is definitely overpriced (especially as their non-organic milk tastes like shit).
The CPI says the national average is somewhere around $3.25, so the conclusion is that H Teet is totes overpriced, and Wegmans is crazy low.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think that you can raise wages of farm workers considerably without the price of milk going to $10 per gallon.
Milk is about $2.50 per gallon now. Simple economic logic suggests that you could DOUBLE the current wages of farm workers, and let's even entertain the ridiculous assumption that 100% of the cost of milk is due to labor. Even then, which is a ridiculous scenario, it would be $5 per gallon.
More likely, you could double the wages of farm workers and it might go from $2.50 to $3.25, at most.
$2.50?
Where do you buy milk?
No kidding? The generic non organic at Teeter is $4/gallon.
You must like getting ripped off.
The milk at H Teets is definitely overpriced (especially as their non-organic milk tastes like shit).
I think everything at H Teets is overpriced. I see no reason to ever shop there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think that you can raise wages of farm workers considerably without the price of milk going to $10 per gallon.
Milk is about $2.50 per gallon now. Simple economic logic suggests that you could DOUBLE the current wages of farm workers, and let's even entertain the ridiculous assumption that 100% of the cost of milk is due to labor. Even then, which is a ridiculous scenario, it would be $5 per gallon.
More likely, you could double the wages of farm workers and it might go from $2.50 to $3.25, at most.
$2.50?
Where do you buy milk?
No kidding? The generic non organic at Teeter is $4/gallon.
You must like getting ripped off.
The milk at H Teets is definitely overpriced (especially as their non-organic milk tastes like shit).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think that you can raise wages of farm workers considerably without the price of milk going to $10 per gallon.
Milk is about $2.50 per gallon now. Simple economic logic suggests that you could DOUBLE the current wages of farm workers, and let's even entertain the ridiculous assumption that 100% of the cost of milk is due to labor. Even then, which is a ridiculous scenario, it would be $5 per gallon.
More likely, you could double the wages of farm workers and it might go from $2.50 to $3.25, at most.
$2.50?
Where do you buy milk?
No kidding? The generic non organic at Teeter is $4/gallon.
You must like getting ripped off.
The milk at H Teets is definitely overpriced (especially as their non-organic milk tastes like shit).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think that you can raise wages of farm workers considerably without the price of milk going to $10 per gallon.
Milk is about $2.50 per gallon now. Simple economic logic suggests that you could DOUBLE the current wages of farm workers, and let's even entertain the ridiculous assumption that 100% of the cost of milk is due to labor. Even then, which is a ridiculous scenario, it would be $5 per gallon.
More likely, you could double the wages of farm workers and it might go from $2.50 to $3.25, at most.
$2.50?
Where do you buy milk?
No kidding? The generic non organic at Teeter is $4/gallon.
You must like getting ripped off.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think that you can raise wages of farm workers considerably without the price of milk going to $10 per gallon.
Milk is about $2.50 per gallon now. Simple economic logic suggests that you could DOUBLE the current wages of farm workers, and let's even entertain the ridiculous assumption that 100% of the cost of milk is due to labor. Even then, which is a ridiculous scenario, it would be $5 per gallon.
More likely, you could double the wages of farm workers and it might go from $2.50 to $3.25, at most.
$2.50?
Where do you buy milk?
No kidding? The generic non organic at Teeter is $4/gallon.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think that you can raise wages of farm workers considerably without the price of milk going to $10 per gallon.
Milk is about $2.50 per gallon now. Simple economic logic suggests that you could DOUBLE the current wages of farm workers, and let's even entertain the ridiculous assumption that 100% of the cost of milk is due to labor. Even then, which is a ridiculous scenario, it would be $5 per gallon.
More likely, you could double the wages of farm workers and it might go from $2.50 to $3.25, at most.
$2.50?
Where do you buy milk?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think that you can raise wages of farm workers considerably without the price of milk going to $10 per gallon.
Milk is about $2.50 per gallon now. Simple economic logic suggests that you could DOUBLE the current wages of farm workers, and let's even entertain the ridiculous assumption that 100% of the cost of milk is due to labor. Even then, which is a ridiculous scenario, it would be $5 per gallon.
More likely, you could double the wages of farm workers and it might go from $2.50 to $3.25, at most.
$2.50?
Where do you buy milk?
Anonymous wrote:I think that you can raise wages of farm workers considerably without the price of milk going to $10 per gallon.
Milk is about $2.50 per gallon now. Simple economic logic suggests that you could DOUBLE the current wages of farm workers, and let's even entertain the ridiculous assumption that 100% of the cost of milk is due to labor. Even then, which is a ridiculous scenario, it would be $5 per gallon.
More likely, you could double the wages of farm workers and it might go from $2.50 to $3.25, at most.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, that's why farmers are having trouble getting enough labor to harvest fruits and vegetables now that illegal immigration has slowed. Non-immigrants aren't willing to do the work.
I've also heard plenty of parents on here suggest that a retail or food service job is beneath their teens who should instead be spending all their time on more prestigious activities.
No, they're having trouble because it's backbreaking, physical labor done in full sun. No one wants to do it. They could find more people if they raised the hourly rates, but farmers are still skeptical they'd find enough. Not to mention the price of food would have to increase to a point that might affect the overall economy.
The Trump kind are right about one thing: importing cheap labor has kept American wages suppressed. They're calling us on our hypocrisy. Are you willing to buy a $10 gallon of milk produced by well-paid citizens with benefits? Because that's what it will take to find Americans willing to do physically uncomfortable jobs.
Agree with this. They can't find people willing to do the job for the low wage they want to pay people to do it.
Our entire economic system it seems to be based off of wanting cheap goods and cheap labor.