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Raising Minimum Wages


Dawn1974

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What is the minimum wage where you live? Do you feel that the minimum wage should be raised? If you are or were to be in a position of unemployment and you are unable to find the job in your profession due to the lack of job market, how do you feel about temporarily taking a minimum wage job?

 

I live in the state of Illinois. Our minimum wage is currently at $8.25/hr. I feel that our minimum wages should be raised up to at least $10.00/hr. The cost of living is steadily going up. The average 1 bedroom apartment in Chicago starts at about $750/mo.

 

I lost my job of 11 years in June of 2013. I was working as a Full-Time Teacher Assistant. Chicago Public Schools closed down 50 Schools due to the lack of enrollment. The job market has been low in that area of work that I'm looking for. I am currently looking for another job. 

 

I don't believe there should be any minimum wage.  All minimum wage laws should be abolished.  All they do is lead to jobs being cut or prices being raised, and they make us less competitive with the rest of the world.  If you raise the minimum wage to $10 per hour for instance, the employers will either cut jobs and put more work on those still employed, or they will raise the price on everything to make up for the higher wages.  Take the fast food places for an example.  You raise the minimum wage for burger flippers at McDonalds, and the price on everything goes up.  Now those on a low income don't have enough money to buy that big mac, so they don't stop at McDonalds.  This means they don't need as many workers, so people are laid off.  As prices have gone up, I have reduced the amount of money I spend on fast food.  I have even cut down on buying coffee at truck stops because their prices have gone up, and I drink instant coffee instead.  I know a lot of textile jobs that were lost because the minimum wage made them unable to compete with imports, and I can't tell you how many people lost their jobs entirely.  It was not a "living wage," but in many cases it was an extra income in a household, and it made a huge difference when it came to buying food, clothes and paying the utilities.  There are always consequences to the government getting involved in things, and the minimum wage was a bad idea from the beginning.  My position is that we abolish it completely on the state and federal level and let the market determine wages. 

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I have mixed feelings about this, since I have been unemployed for about six weeks. It seems nice to have a minimum wage but it's economically unrealistic. I realise that minimum wages are meant to keep workers from being exploited, but if the market was free to do its own thing then jobs would boom and wages would rise anyway.

Saying that. it's no fun to work for minimum wage and to work for anything less than that would be a travesty.

In the end, I would have to settle for economic sense and say that minimum wages are a bad thing.

 

Just for the record, the minimum wage in the UK is about £6 per hour (I think), which is between $9 and $10.

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Guest shiloh357

Minimum wages should be determined state by state.  I would say get rid of a federal minimum wage.   The reason is that economies differ from state to state.   $10.00 an hour in West Virginia is not the same as $10.00 in New York City.   Rather than having a one-size-fits-all federal minimum wage, let each state decide on its own based on its unique economic realities.

 

If we get rid of minimum wages altogether, we would revert back to a time when employers were paying people almost nothing. There does need to be safeguard in place to keep employers from paying wages that are unfairly low.  

 

Raises in pay need to be based on merit and affordability for the company. 

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Guest Butero

Minimum wages should be determined state by state.  I would say get rid of a federal minimum wage.   The reason is that economies differ from state to state.   $10.00 an hour in West Virginia is not the same as $10.00 in New York City.   Rather than having a one-size-fits-all federal minimum wage, let each state decide on its own based on its unique economic realities.

 

If we get rid of minimum wages altogether, we would revert back to a time when employers were paying people almost nothing. There does need to be safeguard in place to keep employers from paying wages that are unfairly low.  

 

Raises in pay need to be based on merit and affordability for the company. 

As far as I am concerned, if someone will work for 10 cents an hour, you should be able to pay them that wage.  Reality is, nobody will work for that salary, and the market will force employers to pay a reasonable wage for the job someone is doing.  I agree with everything you said about wages in one state needing to be different than in another state.  A person can survive on a much lower wage in North Carolina than in New York or California.  The free market will force wages to be higher in places where the cost of living is higher. 

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Guest shiloh357
As far as I am concerned, if someone will work for 10 cents an hour, you should be able to pay them that wage. 

 

 

The problem is that business would exploit the ability to pay low wages and it wouldn't be the case that someone chooses to work for extremely low wages. They would not have a choice because no one is going to pay you say, $6 an hour if they can legally get away with paying $2 an hour.   So basically, everyone would be end up being almost like slave labor.

 

 

Reality is, nobody will work for that salary, and the market will force employers to pay a reasonable wage for the job someone is doing. 

I agree with everything you said about wages in one state needing to be different than in another state.  A person can survive on a much lower wage in North Carolina than in New York or California.  The free market will force wages to be higher in places where the cost of living is higher. 

If that were true, there would have not been a need for min. wage in the first place.  The reason we needed a min wage was because employers were not paying reasonable wages.

 

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Guest Butero

 

As far as I am concerned, if someone will work for 10 cents an hour, you should be able to pay them that wage. 

 

 

The problem is that business would exploit the ability to pay low wages and it wouldn't be the case that someone chooses to work for extremely low wages. They would not have a choice because no one is going to pay you say, $6 an hour if they can legally get away with paying $2 an hour.   So basically, everyone would be end up being almost like slave labor.

 

 

Reality is, nobody will work for that salary, and the market will force employers to pay a reasonable wage for the job someone is doing. 

I agree with everything you said about wages in one state needing to be different than in another state.  A person can survive on a much lower wage in North Carolina than in New York or California.  The free market will force wages to be higher in places where the cost of living is higher. 

If that were true, there would have not been a need for min. wage in the first place.  The reason we needed a min wage was because employers were not paying reasonable wages.

 

 

All laws did come about to try to resolve a problem, so I understand your point, but who decides what is a reasonable wage?  Is 8.25 hr a reasonable wage for a fast food worker?  Was $5 per hr reasonable for such unskilled labor?  Should it be $10 or even $15 per hr.?  All I see happening is politicians getting together and creating an arbitrary minimum wage for political reasons, and claiming that is now a living wage.  

 

I used to work for Wal-Mart.  As you know, the government mandates time and a half for anything over 40 hrs, so what did they do?  They wouldn't let us work over 38 hours, so this forced people to work part time, if they could do so with the flex schedule we had.  I would have rather had no time and a half laws and worked more hours at Wal-Mart.  A lot of ladies in my community lost their sewing plant jobs because of the minimum wage laws, and those jobs made a difference in household incomes.  It just makes more sense to me to let the market determine wages. 

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Guest shiloh357
All laws did come about to try to resolve a problem, so I understand your point, but who decides what is a reasonable wage?

 

That would be up to a state to decide.

 

 

Is 8.25 hr a reasonable wage for a fast food worker?  Was $5 per hr reasonable for such unskilled labor?  Should it be $10 or even $15 per hr.?  All I see happening is politicians getting together and creating an arbitrary minimum wage for political reasons, and claiming that is now a living wage.  

 

I don't think min wage was ever meant to be a living wage.   It would be foolish for politicians to pretend that a min wage is a living wage.   It would show just how out of touch they are.

I used to work for Wal-Mart.  As you know, the government mandates time and a half for anything over 40 hrs, so what did they do?  They wouldn't let us work over 38 hours, so this forced people to work part time, if they could do so with the flex schedule we had.  I would have rather had no time and a half laws and worked more hours at Wal-Mart.  A lot of ladies in my community lost their sewing plant jobs because of the minimum wage laws, and those jobs made a difference in household incomes.  It just makes more sense to me to let the market determine wages

 

 

There is a give and take in terms of what government can do and employers' rights.  There needs to be a safeguard against unreasonably low wages, but protections for employers so that they can offer raises on wages solely on on merit and affordability.

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Guest Butero

I understand your position Shiloh, but I still think we would be better off with no minimum wage.  Since we will never put that genie back in the bottle, there is no way to know what would happen if we got rid of it.  I don't personally think people would work for truly unreasonable wages, but there is no way to be sure, so I will just agree to disagree and move on. 

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There needs to be stiff penalties for employers that utilize undocumented workers. 

I think so too man.You hear about it all the time.

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