theeedude
Lifer
- Feb 5, 2006
- 35,787
- 6,197
- 126
not trueGet rid of it. There's no area of the economy that benefits from the government setting price ceilings or floors.
trueYeah.... because minimum wage laws are what make countries rich or poor.
not trueGet rid of it. There's no area of the economy that benefits from the government setting price ceilings or floors.
trueYeah.... because minimum wage laws are what make countries rich or poor.
true
I say it's a bad idea, but if Americans are stupid enough to perpetrate it on themselves, I'll take full advantage of the cheap labor. My friends here who come from third world sh!tholes always say how they have maids and cooks and drivers, and it's dirt cheap over there.
I find myself in partial agreement with Craig on this one. The Minimum Wage exists for good reason, and clearly should not be abolished. OTOH, I don't believe it's possible (however attractive) to bring the rest of the world up to US standards.
You honestly think that a country is poor or rich based on its minimum wage laws? Do you think Nigeria would become a first world nation if it legislated $20 an hour minimum wage? Do you consider Singapore a poor country?
I posted this question because I knew a lot of the left-leaning posters would oppose such an idea (yes, I admit I had an ulterior motive in the OP). My question for them is, do you support the devaluation of our currency to lower the cost of labor, and thus lower the cost of our exports? I understand the two actions are not the same, and have different results, but the ideas behind each are quite similar.
Put a tariff on all imports coming from Asia (with the exception of S.Korea and Japan) and Central Asia.
And if they respond with the same?
It'll become profitable to make it here.
Keep paying them less and that's the only option they'll be able to afford.Who, save for Americans, would purchase the goods manufactured here, given a similar product from another country that is cheaper? The third-world will always best us on lower priced goods, does it really matter to the rest of the world if a product is made in the US or another country if they are not making it themselves? They will pick the cheapest.
It seems to me that we can increase our exports and lower unemployment by lowering the cost of wages. If we were to lower the minimum wage, labor could be cheaper, and exports should increase. Also, because labor is cheaper, there should be less outsourcing of jobs. Good idea, or no?
Are those huts made by Chinese workers for $3.30 a day?I use to work for about $3.30 an hour. The question is do we want most of the work force to live in huts?
They would be better off with some minimum wage. Right now they are a banana republic only upheld by oil exports, not internal demand.You honestly think that a country is poor or rich based on its minimum wage laws? Do you think Nigeria would become a first world nation if it legislated $20 an hour minimum wage?
Maybe not, but it's not one we should imitate in terms of labor laws:Do you consider Singapore a poor country?
Nigeria would not be better with some minimum wage. All such labor laws are a drain on the economy, and a nation has to be able to afford such a drain. Nigeria cannot, it would simply collapse into oil producers and subsistence farming/mass starvation. When it can afford such laws, it will probably adopt them.They would be better off with some minimum wage. Right now they are a banana republic only upheld by oil exports, not internal demand.
Maybe not, but it's not one we should imitate in terms of labor laws:
http://www.hrw.org/en/news/2005/12/06/singapore-domestic-workers-suffer-grave-abuses
I agree, we should lower the minimum wage so we can compete with 50 cents an hour and Americans can eat dirt for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. Well played, OP, well played.
This is exactly the kind of response I knew I'd get, and this is exactly why I created the OP.
Nevertheless, our current government is busy printing dollars, to devalue it, so our labor costs the rest of the world less. They are saying that if we take a pay cut, more people can afford to pay for our work, increasing the work we do, increasing exports, and lowering unemployment.
Instead of lowering the amount of dollars, they sneakily lower the value of each dollar. I don't agree with doing this, either, but it's interesting to see how the Left reacts to these two scenarios. Adamantly opposed to doing it one way, all the while their overlords are busy doing this, only in a more deceiving manner.
