A
Amaris
Guest
What they needed was a market based solution!If that were true my ancestors picking cotton and sugar would have been be millionaires, now if only those darn masters had bothered to pay em!
What they needed was a market based solution!If that were true my ancestors picking cotton and sugar would have been be millionaires, now if only those darn masters had bothered to pay em!
According to conservative theory it means slavery had to be a good thing because it kepth inflation down. In fact I think that kind of was one of the arguments for slavery back then. If you freed the slaves it would hurt the economy because you would have to pay people to pick cotton and whatnot.If that were true my ancestors picking cotton and sugar would have been be millionaires, now if only those darn masters had bothered to pay em!
https://assets.documentcloud.org/documents/3878462/Uw-Clean.pdfThis paper evaluates the wage, employment, and hours effects of the first and second phase-in of the Seattle Minimum Wage Ordinance, which raised the minimum wage from $9.47 to $11 per hour in 2015 and to $13 per hour in 2016. Using a variety of methods to analyze employment in all sectors paying below a specified real hourly rate, we conclude that the second wage increase to $13 reduced hours worked in low-wage jobs by around 9 percent, while hourly wages in such jobs increased by around 3 percent. Consequently, total payroll fell for such jobs, implying that the minimum wage ordinance lowered low-wage employees’ earnings by an average of $125 per month in 2016.
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This paper, using rich administrative data on employment, earnings and hours in Washington State, re-examines this prediction in the context of Seattle’s minimum wage increases from $9.47 to $11/hour in April 2015 and to $13/hour in January 2016. It reaches a markedly different conclusion: employment losses associated with Seattle’s mandated wage increases are in fact large enough to have resulted in net reductions in payroll expenses – and total employee earnings – in the low-wage job market. The contrast between this conclusion and previous literature can be explained largely if not entirely by data limitations that we are able to circumvent in our analysis. Most importantly, much of the literature examines the impact of minimum wage policies in datasets that do not actually reveal wages, and thus can neither focus precisely on low-wage employment nor examine impacts of policies on wages themselves.
No but it underestimates human nature, it takes regulation to step in when a system falls down due to the greed or inhumane treatment of one human to another. Do you really think any present day social reform would exist if society waited on employers to treat their employees, servants etc fairly? The state had to force 'wonderful' humans to stop discriminating based on melanin content, (they could not even use the same toilets!) if they can't even get that right what makes you think humans are going to want to hand over more money freely to other humans?Wrong. I can't imagine why you would think this. I've already said upthread that I wish employers would deal fairly with their employees. Does that make me an advocate of crime?
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And yet such folks had no intentions of selling their products for no money. How did those planters manage to make all that money to build those fancy white homes, by giving their cotton, sugar and tobacco away for free?According to conservative theory it means slavery had to be a good thing because it kepth inflation down. In fact I think that kind of was one of the arguments for slavery back then. If you freed the slaves it would hurt the economy because you would have to pay people to pick cotton and whatnot.
Jason
Yeah, but the rich, white people will feel infinitely better about themselves, and isn't that why we're here?This is still going on? History tell us what this nation looks like when there isn't a minimum wage.
The poor and brown people seem to always be the sole ills of this nation.
That may be the way it seems to you, but I mostly blame the atheists.The poor and brown people seem to always be the sole ills of this nation.
That may be the way it seems to you, but I mostly blame the atheists.
Yeah it was all those atheists who went to church on Sundays and then after lunch decided to hang the nig...rs for dessert...Those were the good ole days....That may be the way it seems to you, but I mostly blame the atheists.
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Hypocrites and atheists actually have more in common than either like to think.Yeah it was all those atheists who went to church on Sundays and then after lunch decided to hang the nig...rs for dessert...Those were the good ole days....
That may be the way it seems to you, but I mostly blame the atheists.
Nope, sorry. You're not in TNZ. You're not going to continue your pattern of throwing out random insulting drive-by trolling remarks and never backing them up with evidence.Hypocrites and atheists actually have more in common than either like to think.
I'm both, thank God.Hypocrites and atheists actually have more in common than either like to think.
But I'm interested in what you think about the newly released study showing a loss of work hours for low-wage workers in Seattle, apparently due to increases in minimum wage.
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