Basically what you propose is the tyranny of the elites, led by you and those of your persuasion who have the right to extract money from one class and give it to another. Seems like I’ve heard of that system before.
Tyranny of the elites? Are you serious? How are unions the elites? It’s the exact opposite. It’s workers coming together in order to have some power to negotiate the premises of their financial lives. To call that a tyranny is such a perversion - it’s just ridiculous. Look, have you even spoken with actual libertarians? You do know that unions are considered one of the most important organizations in libertarian society? With a weak or non-existing government, unions would become even more important in balancing the power-relation between employer and employee.
And what do you know of the Soviet Union? Unions were beaten down by the Soviet government. In contrast with western unions, which are the one’s relevant to our discussion, Soviet unions were hijacked by the government. So they are completely irrelevant to the point I was making.
How many of those same Walmart moms would spend extra money on cigarettes, alcohol, drugs or platform sandals instead of Similac?
Wow. Just wow. This is really bad. First of all, we were not talking about a single mom who is drug addicted, crazy and generally useless (as you seem to think is the case for working class people). So, you don’t get to add that information to the equation. Unless you want to say that it’s typical for single moms working at Walmart (and similar places) to be a bunch of drug addicts and crazies, you need to keep that to yourself. Second of all, if you do think that, you need to realize two things:
- The casual relationship between poverty and drug abuse is not straightforward. If you have problems, you are more likely to turn to drugs. Poor people have more problems than people in general, so will turn to drugs more often than people in general. That doesn’t make drugs the cause, although drug abuse could become part of a negative spiral. The difference between correlation and causation is always important to keep in mind.
- To suggest that drug abuse correlates with poverty is not the same as saying that most of the working poor are drug addicts, just that they are more likely to be. Here’s another group that is overrepresented among drug users: intelligent people. People with higher IQ’s are more likely to do drugs.
But I see your general attitude here. You think very little of poor people. You think they are drug addicts and crazies. Essentially useless. So useless that they shouldn’t even have money since they just waste it on nonsense (the ironic thing here is that consumption in general is very good for the economy (better than rich people sitting on it or investing in China). So in that respect, “wasting” money is a pretty good idea). I think you are being unbelievably cruel, dismissive and ignorant.
You know, there is quite a bit of research on financial decision-making. For instance, there is a concept called ego depletion. The basic idea is that when you exert willpower to accomplish a task, the next task gets harder to do because you have used up some of that willpower. Poorer people spend more willpower on making financial decisions (having to constantly evaluate whether or not they can afford x, say), depleting their willpower and depressing their ability to exert their will. So, if you want to make the point that poor people are bad at decision-making, you could say that being poor is itself a drain on willpower. But then it would help their decision-making to pay them better, wouldn’t it? (the answer is yes, and there is evidence to back it up. You could try a google search on Dean Spears, Princeton, India)
You seem a fan of statistics. Did you know that if you simply avoid out of wedlock births, substance abuse, graduate from high school the chances you will be poor in America are minimal. But instead of approaching the problem (poverty, hungry kids, lack of education) with an eye to solutions, your plan is simply take money from the group that has it and give it to a group that doesn’t. Again, I’ve seen this plan before. Didn’t work then, doesn’t work now.
What are we talking about here? We are talking about mobility and how to distribute capital in an economy. I have made a couple of suggestions as to what can be done to improve some things. Empowering unions is one suggestion. Changing the university-system to a more meritocratic one is another. I don’t really see how any of that can be characterized in the way you’re attempting, and to suggest it doesn’t work, require you to give arguments.
Now, you mention three statistical correlations: 1) out of wedlock birth, 2) substance abuse and 3) graduating high school. Here’s a good correlation - if you have a graduate degree, you’re very unlikely to be poor. So, obviously, the solution is that everyone get’s a graduate degree. Problem solved. To spell it out: sure you should graduate high school, sure it would help to have a stable relationship before having children, and sure it helps to stay away from drugs, but what is the point of saying that? How does it translate into policy?
Minimum wages also increase unemployment. Check that out before you suggest that upping wages will solve poverty. It won’t.
No, it doesn’t. I think I offered a study in this very thread (look back a couple of posts), investigating the employment effects of increasing minimum wage. It concludes that there are strong earning effects and no employment effects of minimum wage increases. So it doesn’t seem to be the case that we must simply accept what the market sets as minimum wage.