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RE: Minimum wage in america - 11/28/2013 6:48:45 AM   
RottenJohnny


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quote:

ORIGINAL: DomKen
All they cared about was keeping people without an MBA from making a decent living for a skilled job.

Sure, Ken. Capitalism has no other reason to exist other than fucking people, right? It has absolutely nothing to do with using competition in order to increase profits?

_____________________________

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(in reply to DomKen)
Profile   Post #: 41
RE: Minimum wage in america - 11/28/2013 6:52:38 AM   
LookieNoNookie


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Joined: 8/9/2008
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quote:

ORIGINAL: bossman777

Here's a brain teaser for you guys on this thread: Is it more selfish to want the price of corn high or low?


It's not selfish to want either.

(in reply to bossman777)
Profile   Post #: 42
RE: Minimum wage in america - 11/28/2013 7:53:02 AM   
EdBowie


Posts: 875
Joined: 8/11/2013
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Not speaking for them, but the minimum wage reached its peak purchasing power in 1968...  even though the number has gone up, the effect has lagged.


quote:

ORIGINAL: OsideGirl


quote:

ORIGINAL: Tkman117

That kinda ignores a lot of principles of economics, the biggest of which being inflation. Inflation has raised prices over the years, but from what I know, minimum wage in the US hasn't gone up to compensate since the mid 1900s. How can you keep up with inflation if you're making less than what you need to survive?


Minimum wage was raised July 24th, 2009 and in September 2013 California approved to raise the minimum wage to $10 by 2016.


(in reply to OsideGirl)
Profile   Post #: 43
RE: Minimum wage in america - 11/28/2013 8:37:03 AM   
tj444


Posts: 7574
Joined: 3/7/2010
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quote:

ORIGINAL: OsideGirl


quote:

ORIGINAL: Tkman117

That kinda ignores a lot of principles of economics, the biggest of which being inflation. Inflation has raised prices over the years, but from what I know, minimum wage in the US hasn't gone up to compensate since the mid 1900s. How can you keep up with inflation if you're making less than what you need to survive?


Minimum wage was raised July 24th, 2009 and in September 2013 California approved to raise the minimum wage to $10 by 2016.


imo its not just about the hourly wage, its about the hours a person gets also.. if you get only 20 hours a week, how far does that get you? how many part-time jobs do you need? 2? 3? then there is the travel time & cost to each "job", juggling different work schedules, not getting benefits, etc.. The govt has set it up so that corps are more likely to want a part-time workforce instead of a full-time one to avoid paying full-time benefits.. The people that need to take minimum wage part time jobs are screwed in so many ways..

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Profile   Post #: 44
RE: Minimum wage in america - 11/28/2013 9:26:02 AM   
EventideFortuna


Posts: 31
Joined: 10/8/2013
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quote:

ORIGINAL: DomKen


quote:

ORIGINAL: ExoticInterests

quote:

ORIGINAL: DomKen

That theory is disproven daily in this nation.

I was a computer programmer, a very good and very successful one. I, and a lot of people like me, demanded wages reflective of my competence. After a while, when trade laws started allowing it, corporate America outsourced as many programmer jobs as they could to India and Pakistan. They didn't care that quality went down, that projects too longer and costs actually went up. All they cared about was keeping people without an MBA from making a decent living for a skilled job.



That was very mean and spiteful of them! They sacrificed profit just to push people without an MBA down? And that was all they cared about, just keeping you down....not what they thought would be best for the business at the time (whether it really was or not)?

So where do you draw the line of competition for your skills? This hemisphere? This country? Your state, county, city? Exactly where should they limit themselves for finding the most skill at the best price? And why?

It's the modern age, a programmer should know distance means nothing, skill means everything. Perhaps they made a stupid decision, they will lose money and change course, or be eaten by smarter competition.

Did you not read what I wrote? By every single metric outsourcing programmers was bad for the companies that did it. Quality went down, projects took longer and costs went up. But they got to fire a bunch of highly paid US coders. Check around with any programmers who were working in the late 90's.



As a Highly Paid US Programmer for the last 5 years, who Still has a job... Gonna have to say, in the 3 companies ive worked for, the only coders that got fired in these jobs, were crap or slow coders

(in reply to DomKen)
Profile   Post #: 45
RE: Minimum wage in america - 11/28/2013 5:46:22 PM   
LookieNoNookie


Posts: 12216
Joined: 8/9/2008
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quote:

ORIGINAL: EventideFortuna


quote:

ORIGINAL: DomKen


quote:

ORIGINAL: ExoticInterests

quote:

ORIGINAL: DomKen

That theory is disproven daily in this nation.

I was a computer programmer, a very good and very successful one. I, and a lot of people like me, demanded wages reflective of my competence. After a while, when trade laws started allowing it, corporate America outsourced as many programmer jobs as they could to India and Pakistan. They didn't care that quality went down, that projects too longer and costs actually went up. All they cared about was keeping people without an MBA from making a decent living for a skilled job.



That was very mean and spiteful of them! They sacrificed profit just to push people without an MBA down? And that was all they cared about, just keeping you down....not what they thought would be best for the business at the time (whether it really was or not)?

So where do you draw the line of competition for your skills? This hemisphere? This country? Your state, county, city? Exactly where should they limit themselves for finding the most skill at the best price? And why?

It's the modern age, a programmer should know distance means nothing, skill means everything. Perhaps they made a stupid decision, they will lose money and change course, or be eaten by smarter competition.

Did you not read what I wrote? By every single metric outsourcing programmers was bad for the companies that did it. Quality went down, projects took longer and costs went up. But they got to fire a bunch of highly paid US coders. Check around with any programmers who were working in the late 90's.



As a Highly Paid US Programmer for the last 5 years, who Still has a job... Gonna have to say, in the 3 companies ive worked for, the only coders that got fired in these jobs, were crap or slow coders


(Funny how that works).

Being in the land of Microsoft, knowing what housing goes for here (solely because there's far too much money chasing far too few homes), largely because the pay for capable software engineers begins at 110K and goes up rather rapidly from there, further, knowing that they're (Microsoft/Google/Yahoo and a hundred or so game companies, app companies and others in the area) seeking 2 - 4,000 software writers (and always are)...I'd find it difficult to believe a good software guy couldn't get a gig fairly easily.

(At least....in Seattle anyway).

As a contractor, among other things, I've watched more than a few competitors over the last 5 years fade away....but the ones that provide a good product.....are always busy, in any economy.

(in reply to EventideFortuna)
Profile   Post #: 46
RE: Minimum wage in america - 11/28/2013 7:40:05 PM   
truckinslave


Posts: 3897
Joined: 6/16/2004
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quote:

this is in canada, I can't even imagine what it's like in the states for kids like me.


I cannot understand why you assume things are worse in the USA.....

I agree with your basic argument about the minimum wage. It should be aggressively tripled. Concurrently we should rewrite our labor laws so that 38 hours is considered FT this year, 36 in 2014... cut it down to maybe 25 hours per week, maybe just 20, and make certain that those 25 (or 20) hours pay enough to live on.

Then make being here illegally a capital offense.
Then end food stamps.
Then end disability payments for anyone who can walk 50 feet.
Then make taking welfare for more than 60 days prima facie evidence of child neglect and adopt out the kids of those thereby found guilty.
DNA everyone possible (to determine paternity) and make failure to pay child support a min 5 year sentence....
That'll fix about 95% of what's wrong with this country, and improved marksmanship will fix the rest.

_____________________________

1. Islam and sharia are indivisible.
2. Sharia is barbaric, homophobic, violent, and inimical to the most basic Western values (including free speech and freedom of religion). (Yeah, I know: SEE: Irony 101).
ERGO: Islam has no place in America.

(in reply to Tkman117)
Profile   Post #: 47
RE: Minimum wage in america - 11/28/2013 8:26:20 PM   
SubvsSlave


Posts: 201
Joined: 4/6/2011
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: OsideGirl


quote:

ORIGINAL: Tkman117
people cannot survive on these wages and simply cannot get a higher paying job


I have survived on minimum wage. It meant I had to economize. It meant I had roommates. It meant I drove an older car. It meant that I didn't own fancy jewelry, designer clothes or even have anything beyond basic cable. It meant I didn't get pregnant and have children I couldn't afford.

I'm about to sound very callous. If someone (in a normal economy) cannot get a better paying job, it's usually because of their own choices. They chose not to take advantage of free education. They chose not to further their education/skills.

And before anyone bitches, I didn't go to college until I was 20 and paid my own way through....because I realized I wouldn't get anywhere unless I pushed myself further.

But, even as a small example: A California fast food chain In -N- Out, pays higher than minimum wage. In return they expect you to be able to speak clearly, in complete sentences, and show a drive for customer service. Their restaurants routinely have lines out of the parking lot and a wait for tables inside the store itself.

While I'll agree that minimum wage needs to be raised to reflect local economy, I take issue with $15 an hour. An unskilled burger flipper shouldn't be paid at the same level as someone who has pursued further education to gain skills. I'll also add that $15 an hour minimum
wage would have an impact where inflation would impact the entire society. If prices, services and matching salary increases are raised to feed the higher minimum wage, it would negate the raise to minimum wage and go beyond those minimum wage workers.





I agree with what Osidegirl said. I lived my early life along the same lines as she did. I had roommates, rode my bicycle to work or took the bus, did not have cable, shopped at thrift stores, and went to the health clinics and paid off a sliding scale fee. I moved out at 18 and never once thought that I was owed anything or that anyone else should provide for me.

(in reply to OsideGirl)
Profile   Post #: 48
RE: Minimum wage in america - 11/29/2013 12:59:48 PM   
papassion


Posts: 487
Joined: 3/28/2012
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quote:

ORIGINAL: DomKen


quote:

ORIGINAL: ExoticInterests

Well, let's try this one. How about an employer can offer what they think the job is worth. If the employee is worth more than that, the competition will gladly offer that employee a little more $. If the first employer doesn't raise what he's willing to pay too, he will soon find himself with no competent employees and out of business. This works best for skilled jobs, but lets not forget that the service industry still actually does involve skill, or at least some sense....everyone has had rude, dirty, incompetent cashier's (for example)...did it make you want to go back there? If the competition offers a little bit better pay but only employs people that treat the customer well and make a good impression, and you do not, then you will be left with the bottom of the bucket. Want proof, compare Chick-fil-A and that grease joint with the arches. Which do you enjoy more?

That theory is disproven daily in this nation.

I was a computer programmer, a very good and very successful one. I, and a lot of people like me, demanded wages reflective of my competence. After a while, when trade laws started allowing it, corporate America outsourced as many programmer jobs as they could to India and Pakistan. They didn't care that quality went down, that projects too longer and costs actually went up. All they cared about was keeping people without an MBA from making a decent living for a skilled job.


Ken, You said you DEMANDED a wage reflective of your competance. You feel you have the right to demand a wage, but employers do NOT have the SAME rights to find someone who will do the same quality job for less money? Ken, grow up, real Life is an auction. You bid what you will work for, others bid for what they will work for. Lowest bidder wins. Real life.

(in reply to DomKen)
Profile   Post #: 49
RE: Minimum wage in america - 11/29/2013 1:22:04 PM   
papassion


Posts: 487
Joined: 3/28/2012
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Lucylastic

Low-wage Workers Are Older Than You Think

The average age of affected workers is 35 years old;
88 percent of all affected workers are at least 20 years old;
35.5 percent are at least 40 years old;
56 percent are women;
28 percent have children;
55 percent work full-time (35 hours per week or more);
44 percent have at least some college experience.
http://www.epi.org/publication/wage-workers-older-88-percent-workers-benefit/


Lets make this chart more informative. How about listing the education of each group? and the marital status of the men and women with children. And if the adult groups smoke, drink, gamble. (A couple where both have a two pack a day smoking habit costs 7,300.00/yr!) Whos' fault is that?

(in reply to Lucylastic)
Profile   Post #: 50
RE: Minimum wage in america - 11/29/2013 2:21:16 PM   
DomKen


Posts: 19457
Joined: 7/4/2004
From: Chicago, IL
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: EventideFortuna


quote:

ORIGINAL: DomKen


quote:

ORIGINAL: ExoticInterests

quote:

ORIGINAL: DomKen

That theory is disproven daily in this nation.

I was a computer programmer, a very good and very successful one. I, and a lot of people like me, demanded wages reflective of my competence. After a while, when trade laws started allowing it, corporate America outsourced as many programmer jobs as they could to India and Pakistan. They didn't care that quality went down, that projects too longer and costs actually went up. All they cared about was keeping people without an MBA from making a decent living for a skilled job.



That was very mean and spiteful of them! They sacrificed profit just to push people without an MBA down? And that was all they cared about, just keeping you down....not what they thought would be best for the business at the time (whether it really was or not)?

So where do you draw the line of competition for your skills? This hemisphere? This country? Your state, county, city? Exactly where should they limit themselves for finding the most skill at the best price? And why?

It's the modern age, a programmer should know distance means nothing, skill means everything. Perhaps they made a stupid decision, they will lose money and change course, or be eaten by smarter competition.

Did you not read what I wrote? By every single metric outsourcing programmers was bad for the companies that did it. Quality went down, projects took longer and costs went up. But they got to fire a bunch of highly paid US coders. Check around with any programmers who were working in the late 90's.



As a Highly Paid US Programmer for the last 5 years, who Still has a job... Gonna have to say, in the 3 companies ive worked for, the only coders that got fired in these jobs, were crap or slow coders

So? The outsourcing occurred back in the late 1990's and early 2000's. Just check with the people who have actually been in the field for a while.

(in reply to EventideFortuna)
Profile   Post #: 51
RE: Minimum wage in america - 11/29/2013 2:25:50 PM   
DomKen


Posts: 19457
Joined: 7/4/2004
From: Chicago, IL
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: papassion


quote:

ORIGINAL: DomKen


quote:

ORIGINAL: ExoticInterests

Well, let's try this one. How about an employer can offer what they think the job is worth. If the employee is worth more than that, the competition will gladly offer that employee a little more $. If the first employer doesn't raise what he's willing to pay too, he will soon find himself with no competent employees and out of business. This works best for skilled jobs, but lets not forget that the service industry still actually does involve skill, or at least some sense....everyone has had rude, dirty, incompetent cashier's (for example)...did it make you want to go back there? If the competition offers a little bit better pay but only employs people that treat the customer well and make a good impression, and you do not, then you will be left with the bottom of the bucket. Want proof, compare Chick-fil-A and that grease joint with the arches. Which do you enjoy more?

That theory is disproven daily in this nation.

I was a computer programmer, a very good and very successful one. I, and a lot of people like me, demanded wages reflective of my competence. After a while, when trade laws started allowing it, corporate America outsourced as many programmer jobs as they could to India and Pakistan. They didn't care that quality went down, that projects too longer and costs actually went up. All they cared about was keeping people without an MBA from making a decent living for a skilled job.


Ken, You said you DEMANDED a wage reflective of your competance. You feel you have the right to demand a wage, but employers do NOT have the SAME rights to find someone who will do the same quality job for less money? Ken, grow up, real Life is an auction. You bid what you will work for, others bid for what they will work for. Lowest bidder wins. Real life.

Grow up. I kept my job throughout. The fact is that the work that got outsourced was done at lower quality, took longer and ultimately cost more. There was no possible rationale for outsourcing all that work except to put US programmers out of work. It took a decade but the companies that were so eager to do so have shifted back to US programmers because the quality from India was so low.

(in reply to papassion)
Profile   Post #: 52
RE: Minimum wage in america - 11/29/2013 5:02:28 PM   
LookieNoNookie


Posts: 12216
Joined: 8/9/2008
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: DomKen


quote:

ORIGINAL: EventideFortuna


quote:

ORIGINAL: DomKen


quote:

ORIGINAL: ExoticInterests

quote:

ORIGINAL: DomKen

That theory is disproven daily in this nation.

I was a computer programmer, a very good and very successful one. I, and a lot of people like me, demanded wages reflective of my competence. After a while, when trade laws started allowing it, corporate America outsourced as many programmer jobs as they could to India and Pakistan. They didn't care that quality went down, that projects too longer and costs actually went up. All they cared about was keeping people without an MBA from making a decent living for a skilled job.



That was very mean and spiteful of them! They sacrificed profit just to push people without an MBA down? And that was all they cared about, just keeping you down....not what they thought would be best for the business at the time (whether it really was or not)?

So where do you draw the line of competition for your skills? This hemisphere? This country? Your state, county, city? Exactly where should they limit themselves for finding the most skill at the best price? And why?

It's the modern age, a programmer should know distance means nothing, skill means everything. Perhaps they made a stupid decision, they will lose money and change course, or be eaten by smarter competition.

Did you not read what I wrote? By every single metric outsourcing programmers was bad for the companies that did it. Quality went down, projects took longer and costs went up. But they got to fire a bunch of highly paid US coders. Check around with any programmers who were working in the late 90's.



As a Highly Paid US Programmer for the last 5 years, who Still has a job... Gonna have to say, in the 3 companies ive worked for, the only coders that got fired in these jobs, were crap or slow coders

So? The outsourcing occurred back in the late 1990's and early 2000's. Just check with the people who have actually been in the field for a while.


And you're still unemployed.

(in reply to DomKen)
Profile   Post #: 53
RE: Minimum wage in america - 11/29/2013 6:14:52 PM   
DomKen


Posts: 19457
Joined: 7/4/2004
From: Chicago, IL
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: LookieNoNookie

And you're still unemployed.

Actually I'm disabled and unable to work. I worked right up until I got so sick I had to go on dialysis in 2010. I was lucky and the my specialty was not something the companies could outsource to crappy programmers, financial software.

(in reply to LookieNoNookie)
Profile   Post #: 54
RE: Minimum wage in america - 11/30/2013 8:19:16 PM   
LookieNoNookie


Posts: 12216
Joined: 8/9/2008
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: DomKen


quote:

ORIGINAL: LookieNoNookie

And you're still unemployed.

Actually I'm disabled and unable to work. I worked right up until I got so sick I had to go on dialysis in 2010. I was lucky and the my specialty was not something the companies could outsource to crappy programmers, financial software.



But....you can type on a computer, and your mind works.

Kinda seems (so long as the requisite skill set is there) what's required as a programmer.

(in reply to DomKen)
Profile   Post #: 55
RE: Minimum wage in america - 11/30/2013 8:34:11 PM   
DomKen


Posts: 19457
Joined: 7/4/2004
From: Chicago, IL
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: LookieNoNookie


quote:

ORIGINAL: DomKen


quote:

ORIGINAL: LookieNoNookie

And you're still unemployed.

Actually I'm disabled and unable to work. I worked right up until I got so sick I had to go on dialysis in 2010. I was lucky and the my specialty was not something the companies could outsource to crappy programmers, financial software.



But....you can type on a computer, and your mind works.

Kinda seems (so long as the requisite skill set is there) what's required as a programmer.

working the requisite 50 to 60 hours a week is out of the question for me. I do pick up some freelance work but no one wants to hire a part time programmer.

(in reply to LookieNoNookie)
Profile   Post #: 56
RE: Minimum wage in america - 11/30/2013 8:49:19 PM   
LookieNoNookie


Posts: 12216
Joined: 8/9/2008
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: DomKen


quote:

ORIGINAL: LookieNoNookie


quote:

ORIGINAL: DomKen


quote:

ORIGINAL: LookieNoNookie

And you're still unemployed.

Actually I'm disabled and unable to work. I worked right up until I got so sick I had to go on dialysis in 2010. I was lucky and the my specialty was not something the companies could outsource to crappy programmers, financial software.



But....you can type on a computer, and your mind works.

Kinda seems (so long as the requisite skill set is there) what's required as a programmer.

working the requisite 50 to 60 hours a week is out of the question for me. I do pick up some freelance work but no one wants to hire a part time programmer.


I've hired part time programmers.

(in reply to DomKen)
Profile   Post #: 57
RE: Minimum wage in america - 12/1/2013 7:59:43 PM   
graceadieu


Posts: 1518
Joined: 3/20/2008
From: Maryland
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: BamaD

The key point you don't seem to understand is that minimum wage is an entry level wage not a living wage.


Why does it being "entry level" mean that it should be too low for a single adult to survive on?

Why is it morally or fiscally reasonable for people to be forced to rely on welfare for five or ten or more years until they get enough in raises to earn a living wage?

quote:

Point two is that when you bring up the minimum wage everything else comes up


Yep. So raising the minimum wage to, say, $9/hour will mean that not only does the $7.25/hour cashier make more money, but their $10/hour supervisor makes more, and the $13/hour shift manager makes more too. Good things all around.

(in reply to BamaD)
Profile   Post #: 58
RE: Minimum wage in america - 12/1/2013 8:02:59 PM   
graceadieu


Posts: 1518
Joined: 3/20/2008
From: Maryland
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: girl4man
In the course of running a business, you'll learn so much, even if you fail.

It's a real eye opener.


Yep. You learn, for example, that low-wage earners don't have money to spend at your business. That the low wages paid by retailers like Walmart can really cut the bottom out of the economy for everyone else - even businesses that are not in any way their competitors.

(in reply to girl4man)
Profile   Post #: 59
RE: Minimum wage in america - 12/1/2013 8:06:27 PM   
graceadieu


Posts: 1518
Joined: 3/20/2008
From: Maryland
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: OsideGirl

While I'll agree that minimum wage needs to be raised to reflect local economy, I take issue with $15 an hour. An unskilled burger flipper shouldn't be paid at the same level as someone who has pursued further education to gain skills.


To be fair, though, if the minimum wage were $15/hour, employers would have to raise wages for higher-skilled workers in order to compete in the labor market. So a pharmacy tech who makes $13/hour now might make $18+/hour if the minimum wage went up to there.

(in reply to OsideGirl)
Profile   Post #: 60
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