smackababy
Lifer
- Oct 30, 2008
- 27,024
- 79
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It's only meaningless to those who want it to be meaningless which is why you're throwing up an example of someone with 10 children and trying to claim it as a legitimate barrier to implementing things.
No-one is saying that increasing the minimum wage will solve all problems for eternity, allowing us to close down the treasury and disband the IMF, just that it's one thing that will make a difference and nudge things in the right direction.
Except, that nudge will effectively cost Walmart the lost subsidies plus the cost of raising every worker's wage to the new minimum. Do you expect Walmart to simply eat that cost? Let's say it works out to $6.2 billion and the cost of wages. Is Walmart going to just take the profit it? Of course not. That is now how business works. They will have to do something to offset the cost (layoff workers, raise prices, etc.). So, the majority of those minimum wage workers will not have to pay a higher cost of goods, as a good portion of them probably shop at Walmart. How much would that lower their new purchasing power? Would some of them now qualify for assistance? And, if so, do we raise the minimum wage again?