QuinSnydersHair
Well-Known Member
Also some of them are open 24/7.
I considered that. Out here, they're all basically open 6am-11pm with one in every 5-10 open 24 hours.
Also some of them are open 24/7.
That's fine. My point was that you did not really address what he was saying. Honestly, I think you knew what he was saying but tried to spin it off into another direction. Something you frequently do (not a bad thing, just an observation).
There will be an adjustment period during which the minimum wage workers will have a slight increase in standard of living in the short-term, (although many will lose federal benefits that provide an even greater benefit).
A large increase in minimum wage is a short-term hidden tax. Right now 12% of federal spending goes towards welfare (another 11% for CHIP and Medicaid).
9Another potential is businesses cut back other benefits (profit sharing, 401(k) plans, etc.)
If I was a rich business owner in a low margin industry with the economy in its current state, if I had to raise minimum wage (assuming it was a large part of my workforce) I will cut the number of raises given to these employees and upper level employees to minimize the impact. I'd cut back on bonuses and removing matching from the 401(k) plan. My bottom line would not change. I'd cut even more of my workforce under 30 hours (to avoid having to offer health care or face penalties). Or I would get rid of insurance and pay the penalty (the penalty is cheaper than insurance for 95% of my clients).
The other piece of the puzzle is what about the employee who started out at minimum wage and now makes $10. If an employer has to pay everyone $15, do you really think that person is going to get $18?
Possibly, but maximum lifetime accumulation absolutely not. There's nothing wrongwith the basic premise of the Protestant Work Ethic theory as long as profits are being reinvested into new production.
How are you supposed to maintain infinite growth when the world has finite resources?
FWIW your post was a great one.
Molecules aren't finite.
It's not a problem for our day.
Recycle like ****'s.
Lots of back massages and handjobs to deceive us into thinking that we will all be okay.
Which benefits?
Raising the minimum wage would reduce welfare dependance, but would not alter CHIP/Medicaid enrollment after the expansions of the ACA.?
Who are all these employers providing benefits that they don't need to offer? If you are offering a 401K, or working people full-time, etc., it's because this is important to employee retention. That doesn't change when your profit margin shrinks.?
Depends on the position. Manager will still make more per hour than employees. People who have earned raises through years of service will be back at the starting wage.
Unless the poverty level moves up, food stamps, subsidized housing, etc. Not to mention that with additional income they will likely have a tax burden (where with the ind. exemption and credits they were probably getting refunded more than they paid in...
The income levels for medicaid/chip coverage were not altered by the ACA.
This is the rhetoric that is spit out, but it is not true in most cases. This is my area of work, and I can tell you that the majority of the employers I work with have coverage so they can max their own retirement. ...401(k) plans do not have much retention power ...
Those benefits are scheduled to fall less quickly than income rises.
One of these two things is true: you are wrong, or the company I work for, which specializes in this work, just spent an large amount of resources to register the working poor in Medicaid when they did not previously qualify for it. Given yhour previous lack of reliability, care to guess which way I'm betting?
I overstated my point on 401(K), probably. However, health insurance figures hugely into retention, and companies can not just discard it without consequences to retention.
1. Again, I am referencing what would happen with an immediate raise to 15hr which is being advocated for by many.
Exit: your state of Missouri did not expand Medicaid either.
4. What was I not reliable on?
Regardless, the fall-off in benefits is less than the increase in wages at any particular stage. If they lose all benefits, it's because they are more than making up for it in wages.
I live and work in Illinois. In any case, I'm glad we agree that in states that accepted the medicaid expansion, a statement like "The income levels for medicaid/chip coverage were not altered by the ACA." would be false.
I have responded to quite a few over the course of this thread, including one in this post.
If we are referencing nuclear fission, then the area in which we leave the by-products of these 'molecular' reactions is both finite, and an environmental burden.
Ladies and gentlemen, the American motto.
People often forget that Reducing and Reusing are both more important, and more potent in its consequences than recycling.
fiksed
I will never understand the snobby Candiasses/Euros/Chinese pointing this finger when we save the world time and again. We pay a hefty price in our standard of living for doing this and expect, nor get, any thanks.
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I will never understand the snobby Candiasses/Euros/Chinese pointing this finger when we save the world time and again. We pay a hefty price in our standard of living for doing this and expect, nor get, any thanks.
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Regardless, your post doesn't take away from the point I'm trying to make: The American pursuit of perpetual Economic Growth conveniently ignores the environmental impossibility of its very pursuits.
I understood your point before responding the first time. The world will adjust and you're not going to accelerate that much by thumping chests. Technological advancements/price hikes are the only thing that will make us change our dirty ways. Now go order another Chanel fanny pack and enjoy destructive luxuries.
States could choose to provide coverage above and beyond the federally required minimum. But that was true before the ACA was implemented..
People who work FT @ $15/hr (family of four or fewer) will not qualify many welfare programs including Medicaid (even in states that have chosen to expand to the 138% FPL), when you stated they still would.
So I will concede that my statement was misleading, but that statement I was responding to by you: "Raising the minimum wage would reduce welfare dependance, but would not alter CHIP/Medicaid enrollment after the expansions of the ACA." which was clearly erroneous.
All of my other statements in this regard are accurate as well. Even taking into account states that have CHOSEN to expand, those under approx 32k of income are still the largest group of uninsured. Sadly, if you take away those covered by CHIP/Medicaid, fewer than 40% (IIRC) of this group would have insurance.
1) This family would no longer qualify for Section 8 housing. In Utah, the subsidy can cover almost 100% of the rent (I believe minimum out of pocket is $50, but it has been a while since I helped a client with this). So they will likely be paying $600/mo. (based on a quick search this seems more than reasonable) in rent assuming they have a small apartment. Section 8 allows a 2 bd. rental up to $700, but we will stick with $600 to be as reasonable as possible. They will also lose close to $200 in utility assistance. A minimum wage earner adjusted income would cause them to pay about $150/mo for this unit. That is $7800 lost per year of tax-free and FICA free income.
2) They would no longer qualify for food stamps (but would still qualify for WIC). In Utah for a 7.25/hr earner, that is $497/mo., or $5964/yr.
3) They will not longer qualify for Medicaid or CHIP (this would be true in states that chose to expand Medicare too). To keep minimum coverage, the employer can offer coverage of $247/mo and they won't qualify for a subsidy. $2964/yr. and again, with a higher deductible/out of pocket cost compared to Medicaid.
Total $7800+$5964+2964+2000+999.44=$19,727.44 in benefits lost.