D
Darkbloom
Guest
Minimum wage is one of the very simplest of economic problems. The money a business generates after costs have been deducted - let’s call it a pie - is subject to the basic rules of arithmetic, which is to say it can only be sliced so many times.
If you have 20 employees and $10,000 dollars for payroll every week, assuming they’re all doing the same job, you can pay $500/week/employee. If the government arbitrarily raises that to $700/week/employee, the pie is not going to get correspondingly bigger to pay for it. 6 people are going to have to loose their jobs, and the remaining employees are going to have to work harder now that 14 people are doing the work of 20.
This is a well known fact and is actually exploited by labor unions. If low end wages go up, it usually becomes cheaper to have one high skill/wage employee (who’s much more likely to be a union member) to do a job 2-3 low wage workers would do.
If you have 20 employees and $10,000 dollars for payroll every week, assuming they’re all doing the same job, you can pay $500/week/employee. If the government arbitrarily raises that to $700/week/employee, the pie is not going to get correspondingly bigger to pay for it. 6 people are going to have to loose their jobs, and the remaining employees are going to have to work harder now that 14 people are doing the work of 20.
This is a well known fact and is actually exploited by labor unions. If low end wages go up, it usually becomes cheaper to have one high skill/wage employee (who’s much more likely to be a union member) to do a job 2-3 low wage workers would do.