$15 an hour minimum wage killed Seatle’s job market

Discussion in 'Politics' started by UsualName, Jan 29, 2020.

  1. UsualName

    UsualName

    On Pluto.

    Here in America the unemployment rate in Seattle is 1.9%.

    DED1E9C5-3C9D-4CD2-8543-CF119E78F0CF.jpeg

    We need to raise the minimum wage. We’ll all benefit.
     
  2. Agreed. The only people complaining are the one's who don't want to pay people anything.
     
  3. Bugenhagen

    Bugenhagen

    Its almost as if middle and low end wage workers spend their wages in the city where they live and don't sit on the cash or spend it on their winter homes in the Caribbean resulting in more liquidity in the local market. Must be the"pre-communism" right wingers talk about these days disguised as trying to bring vitality back to the middle-class.
     
  4. Tsing Tao

    Tsing Tao

    Far be it from me to bring any actually financial intelligence to this thread of high fives, but we should really look at minimum wage jobs and unemployment, not total employment for the period of 2015-2019 (the data in which the increases were given). You know, because looking at total employment and including jobs that pay salary and a whole lot more, could muddy the data considerably.

    Just saying.

    Might be good to look at restaurant workers as a proxy, since they are predominantly the jobs that fall into these categories.
     
    Last edited: Jan 29, 2020
  5. Tsing Tao

    Tsing Tao

  6.  
  7. RedDuke

    RedDuke

    How can someone even live in US on 30K per year ($15 per hour 40 hours week)? Unless you are in the middle of nowhere.
     
  8. Bugenhagen

    Bugenhagen

    Last edited: Jan 29, 2020
  9. UsualName

    UsualName

  10. There are fundamentally sound reasons for lower unemployments rates in Seattle. A higher minimum wage is ironically part of lower unemployment rates, but not in the way Liberals without business sense would likely appreciate. Part of the improved employment situation is related to Washington State not having a personal income tax which is increasingly attracting investment and entrepreneurs from places like California and China. Another factor is lower real estate prices than California. Further, the record post world war II US economic expansion has helped.

    I saved the main point for last and it important enough to get its own paragraph: Fast food establishments and certain other service providing businesses now predominately hire part time workers to get around Obamacare requirements and disgruntled staff absenteeism. In addition, the business model of “fast service” has been changed “Not so fast” service so these businesses can maintain key price points and profitability goals. Two part time employees versus one 1 full time employee equals improved employment rates, but in a city still full of homeless, are things really better? By the way, are all, or any, for that matter, of the many Seattle homeless counted in their unemployment rate? Probably not.

    Nothing is free and money does not grow on trees, even for politicians. Money comes from somewhere, no matter how the shell game is played, whether it is hours worked per person, services offered to customers, or quality provided.
     
    #10     Jan 29, 2020
    fan27 likes this.