I’m talking about Corporate Persons.
When people like
Ronald J. McDonald, Samuel Walton XII, Duncan D. O’Nuts and John S. Papa pay their
employees less than a living wage, we all pick up the tab through SNAP and Medicaid. When they fly across
the country in private jets, stay in luxury hotels and party the night away at
Trade Conventions and we pay for their party; they write it off as a ‘business expense’. That's another Socialist Program is would like to
see ended, but another rant for another blog.
A 2014 study by the Center for American Progress and the Institute
for Research on Labor and Employment concluded, “The decline in overall SNAP
spending equals about 15 percent of the total resulting increase in wages.”
What does this mean in real dollars?I made my own rough analysis of the impact of raising the Federal Minimum Wage to $15.00. Using data from ‘Characteristics of Minimum Wage Workers, 2014’ (U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics), 1.3 million earned the Federal Minimum Wage of $7.25/hour and 1.7 million earned below the Federal Minimum Wage. That totals 3 million natural-born persons.
Currently, SNAP is available to households of four with annual incomes below $31,000/year (130% of poverty) and total benefits.
Assumptions:
·
Those earning below the federal minimum wage earn an average of $6.00/hour
·
The number of people earning between $7.25/hour
and $15.00/hour equal the total number earning the minimum wage or less; their average
wage is 12.00/hour.
·
Total annual income based on an average of 2000
hours/year
The resulting increase in wages throughout the economy would be $68.75
Billion per year; equating to a reduction in SNAP costs of $10.3 Billion per
year. That alone should be a sufficient
argument for raising the Federal Minimum Wage to $15.00.
But those against raising the minimum wage claim:
‘McDonalds, Duncan
Donuts, Papa John’s, Wal-Mart will have to raise prices to cover additional
costs.’
First, I don’t spend my money at
those places but I still have to subsidize their payroll. I personally don’t care if McD raise
their prices.
Second, studies have shown that McDonalds’
menu prices would only increase by about 10% for profits to remain the same. That
is $4.5. Billion in profit for 2015. (updated 6/29/2016)
Third, if they held the line on prices, they would have to accept a 10% reduction in profits and I believe Ronald can live on $4.1 Billion. What a hard knock life.
Third, if they held the line on prices, they would have to accept a 10% reduction in profits and I believe Ronald can live on $4.1 Billion. What a hard knock life.
‘Business will cut
jobs. More people will be unemployed and there will an in increase unemployment with resulting increases in SNAP spending and other assistance programs.’
A business requires a minimum
number of work-hours a day to operate efficiently. When businesses cut employee hours below
that number, they sacrifice customer service.
If their service level drops too low, they begin to lose customers, net revenue decreases and a death spiral ensues.
Business owners will maintain employee hours to meet the level the service
level they aspire too. Good owners will make sure they provide service that
will assure return customers.
Yes, some businesses will cut jobs. However, many low wage earners hold two
or three jobs in order to make ends meet.
When they earn $15/hour rather than $7.25/hour, they will not NEED to
work several low paying jobs. Many
businesses will see some employees quit. If people have multiple jobs, they will quit one or more of those additional jobs to have quality
time with their family. Maybe even go
out to eat occasionally.
‘It will hurt small
businesses the most.’
What do you define as a ‘small
business’? When those in congress who
oppose the raising the minimum wage use the term ‘Small Business’, they are referring
to business with 400-600 employees. I
define a small business as a mom and pop shop with 5 to 10 employees, 100 tops.
If a real small business, run by real entrepreneurs,
must cut employee hours to survive, then the owner personally will have to pick
up the slack themselves. That is what it
means to build a business with sweat equity. If they want to claim 'they built it', they should build it with their hard work and not with wage slaves.
‘I only make $15/hour
now and I have special training. A
burger flipper doesn’t deserve $15/hour’
Any person who works 40 hours per
week does not deserve to live in poverty. PERIOD.
If you have specialized training
and are only earning $15, you are probably worth $25 to your
employer. Don’t blame the burger flipper
because you are underpaid. It is your boss who is exploiting you, not the burger
flipper.
‘Those minimum wage
jobs are held by high school kids. They
live with their parents. They don’t have a family. Why should they make $30,000 a year?’
The fact is workers between 16-19
years of age represent only 15% of those earning the Federal Minimum Wage or
less.
However, I believe there should
be a special exemption to the minimum wage for full time students claimed as
dependents by a parent or guardian.
$10/hour for the first 20 hours; $15/hour for the next 20 hours and time
and a half over 40. Businesses would be
limited to 15% of their entire payroll for pay to employees with the student
exemption.
Let me debunk all the myths perpetrated by those who favor
paying employees the least amount possible with this:
If your business model is
dependent on me subsidizing your payroll through my taxes, there is something wrong with your business model and you do not deserve to be in business.
Look on the positive aspects on the economy with a raising the minimum
wage.
Besides a reduction in SNAP spending, our sluggish economy
will get an infusion of cash. CEO's
benefitting from paying a low minimum wage, earn well in excess of what they spend each
year. Some is put into bank savings and indirectly helps the economy. However, many invest a significant portion of that excess in Wall Street instruments; effectively removing it from circulation. People earning below $30,000 per year spend
every dollar they earn. Their spending
has a multiplier effect on the economy.
Raising the minimum wage to $15 will give 6 million people additional
income. Income
subject to income tax. We will have more
people paying more taxes reducing the tax burden on the rest of us. Some of the net income will be in excess of
what they need to 'just survive'.
More people will not be working 50 hours a week. They will have
time to spend with their family and have a little extra money to allocate to frivolous
things like going out to eat. This will
increase demand at restaurants. Restaurants
will hire more employees and buy more supplies.
The restaurant supply companies will see an increase in business and need
more employees. As demand grows, new restaurants will open to absorb the demand. This means even more jobs in the restaurant industry;
more jobs in construction, architecture and engineering.
More money will cycle through the economy; there will be more
people employed at all wage levels. More
people will have more disposable income.
More people will go out to eat more often creating more demand for
restaurants. More people will buy more
things. More stores will need to hire more employees and stock more
merchandise.
Now, if only that merchandise was made in America by
Americans earning middle class wages and not in totalitarian Communist Countries
in Asia by workers who are effectively wage slaves; but that is another rant
for another blog.
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