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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: i-node who wrote (785850)5/21/2014 5:44:50 PM
From: one_less1 Recommendation

Recommended By
i-node

  Respond to of 1579747
 
I support the creation and maintenance of a healthy welfare system. A healthy welfare system is one that works like scaffolding works. We use scaffolding in several other venues. We even use it in education. I used scaffolding with my daughter starting at about age seven when she demonstrated the ability to perform high level math problems but had not acquired the lower level skills. She achieved at a high level and in the process picked up the lower level skills incidentally. Over time the scaffolding support is gradually removed as it becomes unnecessary. Of course it requires that the people managing the scaffolding are paying attention and know what they are doing.

If you were to keep the scaffolding in place longer than necessary to get the targeted results, the scaffolding begins to get in the way and even give the impression that success would be impossible if the artificial crutch were to be removed. Unfortunately we have an unhealthy welfare system being managed by incompetent bureaucrats.



To: i-node who wrote (785850)5/22/2014 12:34:04 AM
From: tejek  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 1579747
 
The boost that comes from raising the minimum wage

By Harold Meyerson, Wednesday, May 21, 4:17 PM E-mail the writer

The standard argument — really, the only argument — against raising the minimum wage is that it will lead to job loss. The argument is beloved by die-hard opponents of raising the wage because it provides them with a veneer, however flimsy, of concern about the welfare of the working poor.

Economic studies have repeatedly shown that argument to be spurious. Now the latest survey of 350,000 small businesses from Paychex, a payroll provider company, and IHS, a business analysis firm, provides strong indications that the exact opposite may be true.

In April, the Paychex/IHS survey, which looks at employment in small businesses, found that the state with the highest percentage of annual job growth was Washington — the state with the highest minimum wage in the nation, $9.32 an hour. The metropolitan area with the highest percentage of annual job growth was San Francisco — the city with the highest minimum wage in the nation, at $10.74.

This suggests that the relationship between a high minimum wage and job creation needn’t be inverse. If anything, it suggests that relationship is direct.


To be sure, the Bay Area economy is booming, but minimum-wage opponents would nonetheless have us believe that mandating the payment of close to $11 an hour must cause job loss at least in fast-food joints and Chinatown’s kitchens. San Francisco shouldn’t be creating more small-business jobs than any other city. It’s theoretically impossible.

So much for the theory. San Francisco is doing exactly that.

The compatibility of higher wage standards and job creation shouldn’t come as a surprise. A classic study of fast-food employment by former White House economic adviser Alan Krueger and Berkeley economics professor David Card demonstrated that raising the minimum wage does not lead to an appreciable decline in employment. Opponents of a higher wage have invoked a recent study by the Congressional Budget Office that argued a raise in the national minimum wage from $7.25 to $10.10, as President Obama has advocated, might cost up to 500,000 jobs. But even that study said that the raise would increase the wages of 16.5 million Americans — at least 33 times the number of those who might lose jobs — and elevate 900,000 people out of poverty.

What critics of a higher minimum wage ignore is that, by putting more money into the pockets of the working poor — a group that necessarily spends nearly all its income on such locally provided basics as rent, food, transport and child care — an adequate minimum wage increases a community’s level of sales and thereby creates more jobs. The Los Angeles Economic Roundtable recently concluded that raising the hourly minimum to $15 in Los Angeles County — the nation’s largest, home to 10 million people — would generate an additional $9.2?billion in annual sales and create more than 50,000 jobs.

The Seattle City Council is expected to enact a proposal from Mayor Ed Murray, developed by a business-labor task force, to phase in a $15 citywide minimum wage over seven years. The progress of the measure is a testament not only to the fast-food workers nationwide who’ve been campaigning for $15 hourly pay from McDonald’s and other chains but also to local labor and community leaders. They injected that issue into last year’s mayoral election, winning a pledge from Murray to push for the $15 standard. With direct employee-employer collective bargaining close to a dead letter in the private-sector economy, the likely success of the Seattle measure points to a new model for bargaining, in which progressive governments respond to worker pressure by legislating the wage increases employees can no longer win in the workplace.

In a nation where most people’s wages have been stagnant or dropping for many years, and where the combination of globalization and de-unionization has stripped from workers the bargaining power they once possessed, the role of government in addressing wage issues has become more central than ever.
By investing in job-creating public works, by raising the minimum wage, by lowering taxes on those corporations that give their workers annual productivity increases and raising taxes on those that don’t, government can take up the slack created by the suppression and near-disappearance of private-sector unions. But first, it must dispel the canard that raising wages destroys jobs. Now it can point to San Francisco and Washington as evidence that it doesn’t.

Read more from Harold Meyerson’s archive or follow him on Twitter.

washingtonpost.com



To: i-node who wrote (785850)5/22/2014 12:38:47 AM
From: tejek  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 1579747
 
Welfare is appropriate for a very small number of people. We have 1 in 6 on Food Stamps. Were is 10% of that number I would have no issue with it. But the money being wasted on slackers is just too much.

We have 1 in 6 people on food stamps because the unemployment rate has been hihg since the Great Recession. Why are you not asking your R pols to stop spending all their time on meaningless witch hunts and instead work with Obama to generate jobs?