Re: Jobless Rate: The Truth Bubble?
Actually, what I specifically said is absolutely true: there are many people in the world who are paid less than the US minimum wage, and yet survive just fine.
However, some of what you said answers part of the question I posed as to why that works: it's because the cost of living varies considerably from one part of the world to another. As you said US$8/hr in India buys a lot more than in the US--just as US$0.25/hr buys a lot more in rural China than it does in the US.
The cost of living also varies considerably from one region to another in the US. US$7.25/hr buys a lot more in rural Mississippi than in NYC, yet the minimum wage is the same in both places.
Part of the argument I'm trying to make is that purchasing power is what's important, along with individual rights and the freedom of choice. If I could create jobs that paid less than minimum wage in rural Mississippi, where the purchasing power of the dollar is higher and where unemployment rates are higher and people clearly want and need jobs and would voluntarily work for a lower wage, I am currently legally forbidden to do so. That strikes me as incredibly immoral -- and yet others claim that voluntarily working for a lower wage is somehow akin to slavery, when in reality it's the complete opposite.
Again, it's not the choice between a low-wage job and a high-wage job that faces most unemployed people: it's a choice between no job and a low-wage job; between food on the table and starvation; between government assistance and maintaining their self-esteem. I'm also not advocating any force or coercion, as implied by slavery; I'm suggesting simple, free choice.
It's odd to me that so many people these days seem to equate free choice with evil and government-sanctioned theft in the form of taxes and wealth redistribution as moral.
Originally posted by Rajiv
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However, some of what you said answers part of the question I posed as to why that works: it's because the cost of living varies considerably from one part of the world to another. As you said US$8/hr in India buys a lot more than in the US--just as US$0.25/hr buys a lot more in rural China than it does in the US.
The cost of living also varies considerably from one region to another in the US. US$7.25/hr buys a lot more in rural Mississippi than in NYC, yet the minimum wage is the same in both places.
Part of the argument I'm trying to make is that purchasing power is what's important, along with individual rights and the freedom of choice. If I could create jobs that paid less than minimum wage in rural Mississippi, where the purchasing power of the dollar is higher and where unemployment rates are higher and people clearly want and need jobs and would voluntarily work for a lower wage, I am currently legally forbidden to do so. That strikes me as incredibly immoral -- and yet others claim that voluntarily working for a lower wage is somehow akin to slavery, when in reality it's the complete opposite.
Again, it's not the choice between a low-wage job and a high-wage job that faces most unemployed people: it's a choice between no job and a low-wage job; between food on the table and starvation; between government assistance and maintaining their self-esteem. I'm also not advocating any force or coercion, as implied by slavery; I'm suggesting simple, free choice.
It's odd to me that so many people these days seem to equate free choice with evil and government-sanctioned theft in the form of taxes and wealth redistribution as moral.
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