Ok I think this is the first actual response in the thread. I agree, I just think the "fix" will make the symptom worse not better. In the short term it will benefit some people, but it will also hurt a lot of people too. It'll be much tougher to find employment as a high school kid or someone putting themselves through college.
I do agree that it doesn't fix the problem per se. Genuine question, how would you even define the problem? Just poverty in general, a persistent poverty that passes from one generation to the next in certain segments of society, growing income inequality, the demise of the middle class, increased competition in the world both in terms of intellectual capital coupled with countries with low cost of labor and lax environmental/other regulations, all of the above? Inflation (surely not)?
To be honest I'm not sure, some people's lives are rough. They always have been and when they can't find work because they are too expensive to employ it'll only be rougher.