Originally
posted by
tellarion:
Because being below the poverty line is a great way to start climbing that social ladder!
I worked for 5 years below the poverty line, very recently in fact. Yes, it is an excellent way to begin. Sure, I 'struggled,' but I still had a car, repairs to said car, a large screen television, cable, internet, water, electricity, a place where I paid rent to live, health insurance, car insurance, food, a gaming system, drinking money, spare cash to go out some nights, etc. I had plenty of coworkers who also had children and they made their way as well.
When a prospective employer sees that you've been with the same company for years, that is very good to have on a resume regardless of what the job was. In addition, you will pick up some skills whether that's just customer service or something else, however small. I learned how to talk with customers, how to take inventory, how to prepare and safely store food, how to accurately count money, as well as how to wash and dry dishes just to name a few. You can easily discount these things, but really these are excellent entry level skills to learn, and a solid base from which to move up from.
Further, if you are in the customer service business, you can end up chatting with people who upon seeing excellent service, and maybe even hearing about some of your other skills, could offer you a job. I got many offers over the years, from odd jobs, to job offers elsewhere in the customer service industry, even to programming jobs which is actually how I got my current job where I now get much higher pay and benefits.
Originally
posted by
tellarion:
Also, because most businesses really give a fluff about their employees, right?
I think plenty of businesses care about their employees. The majority of all jobs are in small businesses where the boss often has to interact with most if not all of their employees face to face, meaning they are forced, even if they don't want to, to see these people as humans just like them who have to support themselves. Further, having an employee who thinks you give a fluff about them and has a high morale leads to them being more productive for you. It's really in their best interest to treat you like a human being and pay you what they can afford , which is one of the reasons why these businesses run on such thin margins as it is.
Originally
posted by
tellarion:
I think you guys are over-estimating the generosity of corporate America. Just because you are decent people who run small businesses doesn't mean the big companies act like you do...we've seen time and time again that when given free reign, corporations love to rape their employees and keep the profits for themselves. Absolute free markets will correct themselves, but it is an incredibly painful process...
Fortunately, every single employee in the USA is completely free to leave that job for another one if they think they are not getting a fair wage. Let me say that again: If an employee thinks they are not getting a fair wage, they can get another job where they will. If they can't, frankly they are probably overvaluing themselves.
Further, I think you are underestimating their generosity. The vast majority of businesses run on extremely small margins. Walmart for example, runs on ~3% margins. At one of the companys where I worked, the margins were around 10% and about $80k in profit for a business that cost $700k to purchase.
So this was a business making $80k in profits with 42 man hours needed a day. Going to $15/hr, would have been an average of a $5/hr wage increase. The store was closed Thanksgiving and Christmas, so that's 363 days a year. Rounding down, this would mean a $76k/year increase on a business that only was making a profit of $80k a year! You will say he should raise his prices, but this would be just as likely to just scare off customers to the bigger businesses which could absorb at least part of the losses. In fact, he played with the prices at one point and that is exactly what happened. He ended up making less money.
Raising the minimum wage would force small businesses to fire a lot of people, or go bankrupt. This would only give the big Corporashunzz even more wage pricing power, and would raise the barriers to entry for people who wanted to start a business. Frankly, I agree that handing these huge corporations even more employees, who can sometimes treat their employees like fluff, would be a bad thing. At the same time, what you're advocating for would lead to the precise conditions which would allow that to happen.
I think your hearts are truly in the right places, but the unintended consequences of these actions would be monumental.