That sufficiently high min wages will cause unemployment is basic dogma in economics.
Well sure, if you define "sufficiently" as a rate so high that it forces a company to pay more in expenses than it receives in revenue. But this is an understatement since the company would most likely go out of business. A fast food restaurant couldn't stay in business if it had to pay all employees $50 per hour. Because without employees, you have no business to operate. But the issue at hand is a modest bump in pay that is actually lower than the 40% increase between 2007 and 2010.
But the demand for food won't change. If one food company goes out of business then those "would be" customers will have to go buy food elsewhere, which means other companies will need more employees to accommodate their increased demand. So overall employment doesn't actually decrease on a national level, it just fluctuates on the local levels.
And here I thought you were interested in what the vast majority of economists think, even if you have a hard time not misrepresenting that.
I haven't misrepresented the majority of economists on any point, and you know that.
You seem to have confused this point with the assertion that a particular raise in the wage law will raise unemployment. As I explained in my post, which you missed, is that this is only if it is sufficiently elevated over the market value of labor.
So what is the "market value of labor" for a fast food worker? The minimum wage is the starting point in many areas for new hires. McDonalds averages $7.66 per burger flipper/cashier. Are you saying that if the minimum wage goes beyond that rate, it will result in unemployment? Because that 40% bump in pay jumped well over the market value of fast food labor back in 2010, and none of these catastrophic predictions about unemployment and skyrocketing prices came to fruition.
The reason that particular raises in the min wage did not have this affect on most areas of labor outside of migrant farming is because the min wage is sufficiently low.
Even farm workers can make well above minimum wage.
The unemployment can be relieved theoretically by inflationary action, but that washes out the value of the increased wages. By all means, find me an economist who doesn't think raising the min wage to $50 an hour will cause unemployment if you disagree with me.
I don't disagree with that. I disagree that raising the minimum wage to $10 is going to cause unemployment or increased prices. There is no evidence to support it.
When the wage laws are closer to the laws in question, the businesses that won't hire to pay a higher wage are those that cannot afford it. Those that can will pay and that will change the competitive balance. Why do you think Wal*Mart lobbies for increased min wages?
I'm not sure that they are. I know the CEO made a public statement to that effect, but it is also true that they hired Lee Culpepper, a lobbyist who has lobbied against the minimum wage. It could be the case that the CEO was just trying to help their public image by sounding caring about their employees, or it could be that they are just hoping to further destroy their competition. Though given their success in that, I doubt they really need an increase in minimum wage to help them.
You are aware that many jobs are well above min-wage, right? Why do you think they pay more when the law doesn't require them to? Why do you think the businesses that do pay min wage do so?
We've already covered this in the past in our debates concerning unions. We're on the same page here. Yes, I'm aware that employees have negotiating power concerning their wages. Yes, I understand there is a market value for labor in most industries. However, we're talking about the 2% of Americans who are making minimum wage and cannot survive off that alone.
It's simply not the case that every single business can take a quick spike in their labor costs. The possible effects on labor and its value all depend on the relationship between the wage law and what market prices would dictate. I argued that too high or too low is bad and that its hard to consistently get it just right in a fluctuating environment across a variety of fields and areas. To wit, if you think the wage is significantly too low, then the law is probably depressing aggregate wages.
This is very much like the Laffer curve. There is a "sweet spot" somewhere in the middle, but my argument isn't that every company can afford to pay employees an unlimited amount of money as it is legislated by congress. I'm saying that the modest proposal by Obama, and allowing the minimum wage to rise with inflation, is hardly going to result in the things you're suggesting. Even if it goes above the market value of labor, because in many areas the minimum wage IS the market value of labor.
But why is the market value of labor for fast food crew members around $7.60 an hour? It always seems to be just a tad higher than the minimum wage. It is unusual for companies to keep low skilled employees at the rock bottom minimum wage rate beyond a six month period. Almost every company offers potential raises and incentives. So the minimum wage serves a starting benchmark for companies to work with. If they couldn't afford to pay them more, then they wouldn't. But obviously they can because no matter how the minimum wage increases, companies continue to pay more based on experience and performance.
This was particularly awesome. All McDonald's restaurants can significantly increase - in some areas near triple - their frontline labor costs and be do fine because either 1) the demand for BigMacs so intense that people will huge prices for them (which makes one wonder they that's not what they are charging now)
The prices won't necessarily have to go up and the reason they don't go up now is because prices are regulated by market competition. There is just way too much competition in the fast food industry right now. Selling a Quarter Pounder for $5 isn't a smart idea when your primary competition across the street is selling the Whopper for $3. But because the minimum wage is universal, it applies to all companies and so there is no competitive edge to be had and no reason to risk losing demand by tinkering with the pricing. The only people who get hurt really are the share holders. Boo hoo.
McDonald's profit margins are so obscenely good that they can eat a massive hit in labor costs no probs or 3) McDonald's has drastic inefficiencies in other areas they've neglected for some odd reason that can be fixed to absorb sky-rocking labor costs.
We don't have their profit spreadsheets in front of us, but their profit margins hover
around 20%. Their average burger flipper makes
more than the minimum wage already, so we're really talking about less than a 20% bump in pay for their general crew staff (excluding leadership positions).