T
Texas_Roofer
Guest
I do not think the church is referring to ignoring the marketThe Church teaches that wages should not be determined just by the market. It is wrong to pay people less than what their work is really worth. But if we aren’t using the market to determine what work is worth, how do we calculate it?
Pay is an issue but expense is a different issue, suppose public school is free or insurance is same price all policies are family policies, etc
- Based on how much the person needs to live? Does this mean it’s okay to pay a single person less than a parent for the same job? Do we have to pay a person even more if they have lots of kids? If so, is it wrong to intentionally hire only single people?
yes, except do companies make profits or do employees do that? Here is an example; Wal-Mart ( who I love) has 2,055,00 employees(1) Wal-Mart claims a $9.68/hr average wage(2) that is $19,747 per year so these employees will receive a lot of government aid like Medicare, food stamps, WIC, etc. Now Wal-Mart also listed a 12.731 billion dollar profit(1) that is $6,195 per employee. So the employee receives about 75% while the owners take about 25%, so here is the question should Wal-Mart owners take 25% while other tax payers subsidize the employee welfare?
- Based on how much profit the employer makes from their work? Does that mean that a company that does poorly is justified in paying its employees less for the same work they could do elsewhere?
Yes, a just wage should see the employee taking home most of the profit he generates (not all) however the tax and benefits systems should assure a reasonable minimum standard of living is achieved.
- Some other criteria?
hope that helps
(1) money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/global500/2008/snapshots/2255.html
(2)ufcw.org/press_room/fact_sheets_and_backgrounder/walmart/wages.cfm