Should the minimum wage be kept, abolished, raised or lowered?
4
DickDirk UPDATE: We call it working under the table. Many immigrants work domestically as gardeners, maids and cleaners, many bartenders work this way, too. Migrant workers in the fields and barns work this way all over the country, at a reduced rate because they can't command more. There are always many more willing to work for the wages offered. The US government has been cracking down on this in the last 10 years but the problem is rampant. Every large city has an underground economy. 3rd UPDATE: Well, I guess I'm the one who needs to get his head out of the clouds, I'll do some research on the real world and see just how impending this federal legislation is. I'll let you know my prediction on how soon this will become the law of the land, but nobody should be holding their breath on this one. With our track record of deliberative legislation, you're confident this won't reduce the working poor to serfdom and wage slavery? There are a few wealthy republicans in Congress, as you know. 2nd UPDATE: OK, Ralph, you want to talk about something you've dreamed up called a living wage. No such legislation has been proposed, nobody else in the US has any program called this, but you want to change this fundamental economic index which has essentially been tied to nothing since the great depression, tie it TO something and give it a new name. Christian right-wingers don't oppose your concept, it's not even on their radar screen, or anyone else's. I don't oppose the concept but how does it relate to this list? What do part-time high school kids earn? What do you do with illegal aliens? Even if it were passed it would be regarded in practice as a minimum wage and the inflationary pressure would be catastrophic for the American economy. The concept has a long way to go. UPDATE: OK, Ralph, all the greedy religious zealot republican/conservatives just want to keep the little guy down, eh? So that they can squirrel away more for themselves, right? There's no economic theory at work, the experts at Cornell, one of the most activist, liberal education institutions in the US, are also (suddenly) conservatives who want to keep the little guy down in favor of their own pocketbooks. This is a theological/moral discussion to you, everybody who opposes the increase is a demon, the little guy has no responsiblity to improve and hone his working skills, let's just throw more money at him because he's poor. New York has made itself much more business un-competitive by passing this increase and unemployment will surely increase in a state with (already) the highest unemployment rates in the US. Simply brilliant. Noteworthy: republicans control the NY Senate and it passed overwhelmingly. RINO'S. ORIGINAL COMMENT 9/29/04: In a perfect world, it should be abolished because, in a perfect world, employers would pay a fair wage without being coerced to do so by their government. That said, the reality is the MW is here to stay, and it will periodically screw up our economy, and give screechy liberals something to sanctimoniously rail about. Once you establish a minimum wage, you must tie it to something, though the US has never done that. What is it tied to in the US? It is tied to a periodic compromise between the loving, caring liberals and the heartless, greedy conservatives. I would like someone to ask, since the minimum wage will never be abolished in the US, to what should it be tied or indexed? And then, what do you do with the thousands and thousands of illegal immigrants pouring across our borders, gladly working for less than minimum wage? To me, illegal aliens are not taxpayers and should not participate in government-run benefit programs, like welfare, unemployment, etc. The minimum wage should be tied to some percentage (like 110%) of the federal government's poverty index. OK, there's my dart.