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...can anyone say automation?
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(American Thinker)
We might be inclined to laugh off the national demonstrations calling for a $15/hr minimum wage for burger-flippers, as the suggestion should be received as utterly ridiculous in any intelligent economic debate. But the left isn’t laughing. They’re undoubtedly ecstatic at the media legs such demonstrations have maintained against all odds, and they can’t wait to roll out these downtrodden fast-food workers as a reason to increase the federal minimum wage, victims as they are of an evil system of economic organization that dares assign a value to labor performed in the context of supply and demand.
That evil is, of course, a free market.
One might imagine that defending the “unfree” alternative to a free market would be an untenable position. And it certainly is, if the economic realities that govern marketplaces and history are any consideration. But what social engineers and statists lack in a cogent argument against a free market, they make up for with sly packaging. They suggest that the appropriate role of government is to rein in the excesses of the free market, thereby making the market (somehow) more efficient via sensible impositions in the marketplace.
What must first be understood is that government attempts to raise the minimum wage amounts to little more than price-fixing, and price-fixing is the touchstone of countless tyrants and Democrats of times long gone. So it’s astonishing that any of it can possibly be considered a novel policy position to make the current marketplace more efficient.
A prominent example in the 20th century might be FDR’s razing of agricultural products in 1933 to raise the prices of produce and livestock. Ever the humanitarian and man of the working class, FDR’s policy enactments culled over six million pigs and plowed under untold amounts of farm produce. The end result was that the supply of agricultural products dropped while demand was relatively stable, and as a result, prices increased. This end result was advantageous for farmers who enjoyed a higher price for their product -- less so for the impoverished and hungry Americans who found food scarcer and less affordable.
Why did FDR do it? Well, it was just an idea that seemed sensible to him and his Secretary of Agriculture, Henry Wallace, at the time, the latter a man who was reportedly “most impressed” by Soviet farming. That the Soviet farming practices with which he was so enamored and influenced by led to the Holodomor in Ukraine, or that these policies set a precedent for the “basic governmental approach of supporting farm prices by reducing supplies” that “continues to this day.” But that doesn’t dent his legacy a bit among the progressive faithful, or in the schoolbooks your children read.
Democrats today are even less forgivable for their efforts to fix wage prices, knowing, as they should from ample evidence throughout history, that the practice is destructive. Even Dr. Alan Krueger, chairman of the president’s Council of Economic Advisors, could only muster the following unconvincing support for Obama’s suggested policy of raising the minimum wage to $9 back in 2013: “A range of economic studies show that raising the minimum wage increases earnings and reduces poverty without measurably reducing unemployment.”
“Note the shifty adverbs, “modestly” and “measurably, which can paper over a lot of economic damage,” observes the Wall Street Journal in an article from February 2013, cleverly titled “The Minority Youth Unemployment Act.” “In the real world,” the article continues, “setting a floor under the price of labor creates winners and losers. Some workers will get a $1.75 raise. Great. But others – typically the least educated and skilled – will be priced out of the market and their pay won’t rise to $9. It will be zero.”
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