I personally see minimum wage as a default choice for employers if it’s enough to staff their business.
employment is a two way agreement, why does the government need to set a price floor for labor? anyone who doesn't want to work for $4/h can just decide not to, but the law makes it illegal for anyone who would rather do that than be unemployed. Wages generally correlate with experience and these laws are robbing teenagers and young adults of valuable experience years.
There’s a margin between the price you can sell a product for and the price you decide to sell a product for.
The same applies to wages. There’s a wage that you can offer and still have a healthy business, then there’s the wage you do offer because someone is willing to take the job.
Maximizing pricing and minimizing wages based on the limits you can get away with is the problem. Human decency should be a factor in setting prices and wages, not just strictly market economics and opportunity.
Insulin is too expensive and minimum wage is less than what’s needed to live reasonably well.
Those who control prices and wages can and should fix those problems. The government shouldn’t even have to intervene.
They do, but my point is, as a species, we should do better to improve conditions for others when we have the opportunity.
price elasticity is irrelevant. if someone is paid $10/h and earns their employer $11/h, and the city they live in raises minimum wage to $12/h, that person is now unemployed
> minimum wage is less than what’s needed to live reasonably well
this is irrelevant and an example of how "minimum wage" is an insidious term that hides the fact that there is still a (legal) minimum of $0: unemployment. Unemployment is not better than a low wage that can help you get valuable experience as a teenager or young adult. Once again, everyone in the world who is employed can make decisions about their own employment and how much they're willing to accept in return for their work, but magically we decide that some people would be better off without jobs because they're not providing above a certain threshold of value?
> They do, but my point is, as a species, we should do better to improve conditions for others when we have the opportunity.
Again, there is no economic system that can change the fact that we live in a world with limited resources that need rationing. And preventing people from gainful unemployment is improving their condition how exactly?