One thing that always happens when there's stonk-related discourse is well-off media types who think owning stocks is normal getting very confused and irritated to discover most people on here think of the market as a gacha game for rich cokeheads
It's not the New York end that worries me. The minimum wage in New York could be $100 and I wouldn't care. My concern is that in a lot of low-cost-of-living-places, a lot of service industry businesses that are locally important may have to cut back at $15
-
-
I just think it would probably by better to just raise taxes and then expand the EITC, to provide a level amount of support through a system (taxes) which is already (in theory) progressively adjusted.
Kiitos. Käytämme tätä aikajanasi parantamiseen. KumoaKumoa
-
-
-
Another way of articulating my point might be that the current federal wage is so bad that it makes $15 *in 2025* seem a lot more unreasonable for South Dakota than it actually is. Minimum wage workers are starving there too.
-
I mean, sure. The perpetual danger with price floors on labor is that you risk closing out low productivity workers from the market, which blocks them from becoming high productivity workers.
- Näytä vastaukset
Uusi keskustelu -
Lataaminen näyttää kestävän hetken.
Twitter saattaa olla ruuhkautunut tai ongelma on muuten hetkellinen. Yritä uudelleen tai käy Twitterin tilasivulla saadaksesi lisätietoja.