Post ID: @YuSJrqp-4vee said: "YuSJrqp-4xlk You're wrong, increasing the wages so much will only cause more companies to RAISE prices. I agree at some point, yes raise the wages, but if you raise them up too damn high and quickly it will cause grocery stores to raise food prices; raise gas prices, raise rent, etc. etc. It will also make business either raise their prices in their stores because they have to pay more for workers, or force automation.
Face it, as soon as wages go up, everything else does in the process."
There is no history to draw upon in this country to directly analyze the effects of a $20 minimum wage, but what we do have suggests rather clearly that whatever level of minimum wage might begin to have a chilling effect on jobs, we have yet to reach it.
In 1968 the minimum wage was $1.60/hr and had its highest purchasing power ($11.76/hr). Minimum wage has increased in a linear fashion in terms of dollars (2019 $7.25/hr), but in terms of real dollars, minimum wage has declined sharply from its highest point.
Since 1968, the US per capita GDP, allowing for inflation, has risen by 125%
If the minimum wage rose in line with GDP, it would be at $24.63.
GDP has risen by an average of 1.7% per year. Putting the minimum wage up to $20 would be the equivalent of an average 0.85% rise above inflation, each year. That seems fairly modest.
The whole concept of sellers being able to "pass on" either costs or savings to consumers is a vast oversimplification promoted by right-wing mouthpieces to people who are unable to grasp actual economic principles. Market pricing is not merely a direct function of production costs...inflation doesn't work that way. Raising the minimum wage doesn't increase the amount of money that exists, it just forces more of into the hands of those on the lower end of the economic ladder. Raising the minimum wage would only increase prices on goods if there wasn't enough goods. America produces more than enough for everyone (evidenced by the amount of food and other goods that groceries stores are forced to throw away everyday). The poor just don't have enough money to buy them. Even then, giving the poor more purchasing power would probably actually increase the supply of goods for them, because it would shift production from luxury goods to the basic necessity (the market follows the money, not the other way around).
In our current situation, there is no requirement that an increase in the minimum wage necessitates an increase in retail prices.....prices are decoupled from labor costs because productivity has been rising steadily for the last 30 years while wages have remained stagnant. Where has the surplus value gone? Gone to the owning class (CEO salaries and stock dividends) rather than the working class. There is a huge amount of give-back on the profit side before we are in a situation where further increases in wages would be inflationary.
You know that whole "inequality" thing? It is directly related to the split between profits and wages. We are in a situation of extreme imbalance, thanks to Reagan and Thatcher and 30 years of upper class shifting of wealth to the top, and there can be a whole lot of wage adjustment done before worrying about the inflationary impact.
Maybe, just maybe, expectations for high profits for everything is the actual culprit ....