Working For a Living
Bus boy, bartender, ladies of the night
Grease monkey, ex-junky, winner of the fight
Walking on the streets, it's really all the same
Selling souls, rock n' roll, any other day
Workin' for a livin' (workin')
Workin' for a livin' (workin')
Workin' for a livin', livin' and workin'
I'm taking what they giving 'cause I'm working for a
livin'
If you work for a living, then should there be a minimum
wage?
A minimum wage
benefits society, which includes both the worker and his employer. Under unregulated capitalism, the minimum
wage should be zero. ( Under unregulated capitalism, there also should be no child labor laws or
overtime laws, but that is another subject.).
If the minimum wage is zero, eventually workers would no longer be able
to live and work. Not only would the
employer have no workers, but he probably would have no customers because he
probably sells his products to workers of other firms. An employer who pays zero for wages might
profit today, but it is an unsustainable business model, and will fail in the
future.
If it is accepted that there should be a minimum wage, then
what should be that minimum wage? In
2007, the Federal minimum wage was established as $7.25 per hour. However there has been inflation since that
time. The Federal Reserve Bank has a
goal to keep inflation at less than 2% per year.
That increase has not been the same on all products. Since 2007, and especially during the COVID
pandemic, inflation has been higher in some consumer categories. According to
the Bureau of Labor Statistics, food prices increased by 4% last year, while
other products such as energy declined by 7%.
According to the Consumer Price Index, a wage of $7.25 in
2007 US Dollars, USD, would be worth
only $5.82 in 2021 USD. Has this real
decrease resulted in an increase in jobs?
Most probably, since that wage is closer to zero and thus the cost of
labor has decreased for each employer.
But that is not a sustainable model for society, or for those businesses
who benefit at the present time.
Increasing the minimum wage to at least the previously accepted value
should be justified. However, that is
only if the prices of all products grew at the same rate. Since the price of those products most likely
to be purchased by minimum wage workers has increased at rate higher than
inflation, then a higher minimum wage than $9 per hour appears to protect
society, including both workers and their employers. Additionally that rate
should be indexed to increase, if prices increase.