Posted on 03/22/2015 10:01:57 AM PDT by Diana in Wisconsin
"Why Are So Many Seattle Restaurants Closing Lately? asks a recent Seattle magazine headline. The Scrapbook is no restaurateur, let alone knowledgeable about the local economy, but well guess it has something to do with the fact that Seattles new $15 minimum wage starts phasing in on April 1. However, the first rule of liberals confronting the laws of basic economics is deny, deny, deny.
A feature in the Seattle Times called the Truth Needle (were guessing the Times didnt want to pony up to license PolitiFacts logo) declares the claim that minimum wage has anything to do with the undeniably large number of restaurant closings is false.
Now, its certainly the case that restaurant operators in liberal Seattle are claiming a higher minimum wage has nothing to do with their business decisions. This is likely somewhere between a delusion and a lie, so lets split the difference and call it public relations. Again, basic economics tells us that the typical restaurant operates on a slim profit margin, and wages typically run about 35 percent of operating costs.
Nonetheless, in very liberal and very wealthy Seattle, angering your customer base by proclaiming your opposition to redistributive social justice would be foolish. It would also be foolish to anger the local regulatory czars in a city that has proclaimed the new wage law a political triumph. Restaurateurs are business people, not politicians, and angering the mayor over the law he signed is not a smart business move, notes the Washington Policy Center.
However, theres little doubt that the citys heralded food scene is running scared. A spokesman for the Washington Restaurant Association told the Washington Policy Center, Every [restaurant] operator Im talking to is in panic mode, trying to figure out what the new world will look like. Were fairly certain it will be a Brave New Seattle, where there are fewer great restaurants, to say nothing of all the other labor-intensive businesses that will be shutting down.
Naturally, this means fewer jobs for the poor. Worse, the increased wages will also amount to a regressive tax. Economist Tyler Cowen flags a new study in the Journal of Political Economy by Stanfords Thomas MaCurdy, concluding an increase in the minimum wage produces a value-added tax effect on consumer prices that is more regressive than a typical state sales tax.
The study also points to another reason why cash-strapped municipal governments like artificially raising wages. Unlike most public income support programs, increased earnings from the minimum wage are taxable, MaCurdy writes. Over 25 percent of the increased earnings are collected back as income and payroll taxes. . . . Even after taxes, 27.6 percent of increased earnings go to families in the top 40 percent of the income distribution.
So minimum wage increases grow government, make the rich richer, and still allow liberal politicians to demagogue the hell out of poor voters by falsely claiming theyre putting more money in their pockets. In the longer term, living wage laws and other en vogue liberal policies are likely to transform one of Americas best cities into Detroit on the Puget Sound. It would be nice if there were a stronger political counterweight in our overwhelmingly Democratic cities, but the best hope for conservatives regaining a foothold in urban America might be simply to stand back and let liberal economic policies work their magic.
That's brilliant!
Or maybe do even and odd blocks to eliminate the variables of neighborhood economics.
Detroit, Russia, etc... Is this the future of the west coast?
http://p-i-f.livejournal.com/6289095.html
Let me put it in words that a liberal will understand. When the price rises, do you buy more of something, or less? Are there more Fords or Ferrari’s sold? If beer is $100 a case, will you drink more or less, or ...something else? Jobs are the same way
Simple economics seems to baffle libs.
as long as the govt class and the filthy rich stay rich, no problem...
but if any business depends on the 85% of the middle/working classes to keep them afloat...well I have a ocean front property in A-ri-zona for ya.
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