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Correlation Between Unemployment and the Minimum Wage ( There is none)
Syracuse University ^ | 10/4/16 | Syracuse University

Posted on 08/16/2019 6:30:54 AM PDT by central_va

With the “Fight for $15 External link ” making headlines, opinions abound about whether raising the federal minimum wage will have a positive or negative effect on unemployment rates. Advocates of an increase cite the impossible task of making ends meet on today’s paltry sum of $7.25 an hour and say an increase would have little effect on the overall economy. Those against such a move predict that doing so would cause employers to lay off more and hire less—raising unemployment rates as a result. As is often the case with such emotionally charged issues, especially in an election year, the broader conversation about the minimum wage tends to involve more feeling than historical fact. To balance such a dynamic, we decided to turn to the data to see what it reveals.

(Excerpt) Read more at onlinebusiness.syr.edu ...


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: 15dollarminimumwage; emplyment; inflation; minwage; noeffect
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To: Penelope Dreadful
OT: Regarding your home page, is that Russian, Jewish, or pumpernickel?

-PJ

201 posted on 08/22/2019 3:53:27 PM PDT by Political Junkie Too (The 1st Amendment gives the People the right to a free press, not CNN the right to the 1st question.)
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To: dfwgator

Who said it was? Once again, you are grasping at straws and making stuff up rather than simply admitting that you have been wrong.


202 posted on 08/22/2019 4:13:53 PM PDT by Penelope Dreadful (And there is Pansies, that's for Thoughts.)
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To: Political Junkie Too

Liquid. . .


203 posted on 08/22/2019 4:15:33 PM PDT by Penelope Dreadful (And there is Pansies, that's for Thoughts.)
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To: central_va

For those with no memory wage and price controls are miserable policy failures...


204 posted on 08/22/2019 4:17:30 PM PDT by northislander
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To: Penelope Dreadful
You seem to have a one sided view of the issue, as do most proponents of a minimum wage increase. I can understand why workers would be willing to work for $15/hr, not so sure why an employer would be willing to pay it. It's not just a question of workers; there are two parties involved. Ignore that at your own risk.

But okay...any number chosen as a desirable minimum wage is, by definition, arbitrary. It seems to me you are really cheating out those 'in need.' at $15/hr, because your position (not mine) says it has no consequence.

Why would you deny them a vacation every year, the ability to save for retirement? Why do you hate those making minimum wage?

Your side has said, by definition, that increasing the minimum wage has no effect on employment. So $25/hr would benefit them more and, again, has no real world negative consequence. Of course, that study is limited in what could be studied, again, by definition.

But that doesn't matter in the real world, because the study doesn't reflect the real world. In theory, there should be no difference between theory and practice; in practice, there is.

There's never been a study on the affect of a doubling of the minimum wage. The study doesn't say to what degree a given minimum wage moves the market, as opposed to 'catching up' with the market. Those of us now free of academia are well aware of its limitations...and the degree to which GIGO applies.

This study has no real world application. Anyone with any experience in operating a minimum wage business knows this well.

You can't answer why not $500/hr...because there's no more or less basis for that than $15.

Why do academics have such a difficult time understanding that price controls don't work, and have unintended consequences?

205 posted on 08/22/2019 4:18:59 PM PDT by gogeo (The left prides themselves on being tolerant, but they can't even be civil.)
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To: Penelope Dreadful
LOL! Good one! 😀 🥃

-PJ

206 posted on 08/22/2019 4:24:00 PM PDT by Political Junkie Too (The 1st Amendment gives the People the right to a free press, not CNN the right to the 1st question.)
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To: central_va

Obtuse; again, go look at what is taking place in Seattle (did I say Wash. state?)


207 posted on 08/22/2019 4:24:18 PM PDT by _Jim (Save babies)
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To: Penelope Dreadful

re: “What gives the government (apparently at your behest) the right to force me to pay more for any product?”

First, the Constitution which grants “police powers” to the states, and regulation of “interstate commerce” to itself.

Second, the laws of the state in which you live.

(Gee, I wish all questions were this simple to answer!)


I don’t have time to “put your nose into it” right this very moment ... but you 1) seem to have a very warped view of what is in the Constitution and 2) from a governmental standpoint don’t seem to have any regard for personal property or personal rights.

At the rate you’re going, you must have been all-in for Obama-care.


208 posted on 08/22/2019 4:28:30 PM PDT by _Jim (Save babies)
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To: gogeo

You said, “You can’t answer why not $500/hr...because there’s no more or less basis for that than $15.”

Huh??? Do you not have the ability to read??? I have answered it several times on this thread. You remind me of the old joke, “How many surrealists does it take to change a light bulb???”

One more time, for the slow people here, the statement, “Why not make the minimum wage $500 per hour?” is NOT an argument. A livable minimum wage is an amount necessary to pay for a minimal basic living. Which most of us can easily calculate. It is not an arbitrary amount plucked out of someone’s rear end. It is based on a basic food bill, basic rent, basic utilities, a basic vehicle. Most of us can figure that out. That “$500 / hour” statement is simply deceptive, and meant to deceive people and derail the argument with a gross mischaracterization.

But there are always some folks, who are either very stupid, or very negligent and simply repeat what they heard some other nincompoop say, or work for a conservative think tank.

So, go ahead and tell us why you think $500 per hour is right there on a rational par with $15/hour.


209 posted on 08/22/2019 4:29:50 PM PDT by Penelope Dreadful (And there is Pansies, that's for Thoughts.)
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To: _Jim

I suggest you will never be able to put my nose in it. However, you are very good at calling names, so if I was you, I would put my efforts in that field! You have a natural talent for it!


210 posted on 08/22/2019 4:31:21 PM PDT by Penelope Dreadful (And there is Pansies, that's for Thoughts.)
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To: Political Junkie Too

I am glad you like it!


211 posted on 08/22/2019 4:36:13 PM PDT by Penelope Dreadful (And there is Pansies, that's for Thoughts.)
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To: Penelope Dreadful
I think we're witnessing strategic ignorance.

I acknowledged that it would improve the quality of work life for those making minimum wage, those still employed anyway.

You don't dare touch the pig in the bathtub, why you think employers can/will pay it.

212 posted on 08/22/2019 4:41:15 PM PDT by gogeo (The left prides themselves on being tolerant, but they can't even be civil.)
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To: Penelope Dreadful; central_va
I'm going to wade into this discussion at this point (because it's the last post), but this doesn't relate to this specific post or mini-discussion the post replied to.

As a thought exercise, let's turn the discussion upside down. I'm surprised that socialists and communists are talking about a minimum wage when they are always railing against "the rich not paying their fair share." What they really want is a maximum wage, not a minimum wage. They try to achieve that through confiscatory income tax policy instead of outright legislation of maximum wages over minimum wages.

But what if they became so emboldened as to try to pass a maximum wage law one day?

What if liberals tried to cap the wage that people could earn? What if, say, a CEO can't earn any more than $1 million instead of $25 million? The same with athletes, movie celebrities, and recording artists. This would force a realignment of all the wages below in order to reapportion the pay-to-contribution ratio.

More practical, what if a law capped the maximum wage at some multiple of a company's lowest wage (or federal statistical median wage or poverty wage...)? Since a true minimum wage is zero, we obviously can't pay that to the bottom rung (except in slavery conditions) as a zero minimum equals a zero maximum multiple, so a true bottom wage would emerge that aligns with the legislated maximum wage. This is only one example scheme for illustrative purposes.

Today, the sky's the limit regarding the highest wage earners, so there is no pressure from above to fit the lower wages into a cohesive structure. This is why people are legislating minimum wages instead of letting market forces set the wage. Would a maximum wage actually make market forces align a true living wage to it that fits?

I'm not a proponent of any of this, but I wonder if a maverick Republican somewhere might try to throw liberals for a loop by turning the minimum wage debate into a maximum wage debate and box them into agreeing that a maximum wage would better set a livable minimum wage all on its own?

Just to be clear, this would all be anathema to the American Dream, which sets no limits on what a dedicated individual can achieve.

-PJ

213 posted on 08/22/2019 4:53:13 PM PDT by Political Junkie Too (The 1st Amendment gives the People the right to a free press, not CNN the right to the 1st question.)
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To: gogeo

Well, they might not pay it. It is very possible that their business model will not permit them to charge an honest price for whatever they do. They may even buy a “bot” to replace them. But I would rather see that than to continue subsidizing their business. Perhaps that would provide more impetus to drive out the cheap working illegal workers, and cheap legal ones, too.


214 posted on 08/22/2019 4:53:26 PM PDT by Penelope Dreadful (And there is Pansies, that's for Thoughts.)
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To: Political Junkie Too

“Just to be clear, this would all be anathema to the American Dream, which sets no limits on what a dedicated individual can achieve. “

But is that what an overpaid corporate executive does to get his pay? There is already a “tax cap” on high wages, IIRC, and that is why many corporations use alternative methods to compensate their executives. I think the limit is 1 Million Dollars, but that is just memory. Beyond that is not deductible. I think most of the high pay is not based on “dedication” but massive conflicts of interest in the boardroom.


215 posted on 08/22/2019 5:04:36 PM PDT by Penelope Dreadful (And there is Pansies, that's for Thoughts.)
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To: Penelope Dreadful

“Charge an honest price?” What do you think that means?


216 posted on 08/22/2019 5:09:24 PM PDT by gogeo (The left prides themselves on being tolerant, but they can't even be civil.)
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To: Penelope Dreadful
I think most of the high pay is not based on “dedication” but massive conflicts of interest in the boardroom.

Maybe, but that's not the point of my post and doesn't address the thought experiment.

-PJ

217 posted on 08/22/2019 5:11:21 PM PDT by Political Junkie Too (The 1st Amendment gives the People the right to a free press, not CNN the right to the 1st question.)
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To: gogeo

Huh, again??? Please try to keep up! If your cheeseburger cost $1, and that is based on your employees getting food stamps, housing vouchers, and other benefits, than $1 is not an honest price. Pay a living wage and the price might become $2, but probably less. Whatever, it would then be an “honest” price.


218 posted on 08/22/2019 5:20:13 PM PDT by Penelope Dreadful (And there is Pansies, that's for Thoughts.)
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To: Political Junkie Too

Well, I would be for it for publicly held corporations. You could do the same thing with super high income taxes.


219 posted on 08/22/2019 5:22:24 PM PDT by Penelope Dreadful (And there is Pansies, that's for Thoughts.)
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To: Penelope Dreadful

Where are you buying a cheeseburger for $1?


220 posted on 08/22/2019 5:24:51 PM PDT by gogeo (The left prides themselves on being tolerant, but they can't even be civil.)
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