g********2 发帖数: 6571 | 1 August 16, 2016
The real question about minimum wage laws
By Cliff Spectre
The minimum wage is an issue this campaign season, but there is a different
approach I have not heard mentioned. What if we could simultaneously try 50
different approaches and determine which approach is the most effective?
The federal minimum wage requirement was originally determined to be
unconstitutional by the Supreme Court. After FDR threatened to pack the
Supreme Court with an additional six justices, the Supreme Court gave in to
pressure and ultimately ruled the federal minimum wage constitutional.
One thing unique to the United States is that it was set up as a
confederation of different states. Each colony had its own identity. They
gathered together in order to gain independence from Great Britain. The
federal government was set up by the states to do certain things it could do
better than the states – for example, to conduct foreign policy and settle
disputes among member states. The states were not carved up by the federal
government. Per the original Articles of Confederation and the subsequent
Constitution, the federal government was given a limited number of powers.
The states and local governments were the source of most laws and
regulations, thus keeping government closer to the people.
In the developed world, some countries do not have a required minimum wage.
In 2014, seven European Union countries, Austria, Cyprus, Denmark, Finland,
Germany, Italy, and Sweden, did not mandate a minimum wage. A Cato study
shows that unemployment rates were lower in the counties without a minimum
wage than they were in the EU counties with a minimum wage.
All but five states have their own minimum wage laws. The ones who have
them deal with them in a myriad of different ways. Some states' minimums
are higher; some are lower. Some are more complex and treat different
industries differently.
The cost of living is different in every state. In Hawaii, $15.00 will buy
you the same amount of goods $6.60 will buy you in Mississippi. In
Massachusetts, $15.00 will buy you the same amount of goods $8.85 will buy
you in Indiana. A federal minimum wage does not treat each state equally.
The smallest state in population is Wyoming with over 500,000 residents.
That is more people than many countries. Iceland has around 330,000.
Iceland has a wonderful first-world society. It has good schools, good
roads, good medical care, a police force, its own currency, and – guess
what – no mandated minimum wage. If a country as small as Iceland, with
the limited natural resources it has, can function quite well without a
minimum wage dictated to it from Washington, D.C., doesn't it make sense
that Wyoming and the other 49 states can, too?
The debate about a federally mandated minimum wage should be about whether
or not to abolish it rather than how high it should be. You may say, "That'
ll never happen." But if I had said back in 1980 that we would be debating
who should be allowed in what bathroom in 2016, who would have believed it?
The first step is to get the conversation started. The federal government
should not dictate wage rates. If government is to do it, the states can do
it in a fairer manner.
Read more: http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2016/08/the_real_question_about_minimum_wage_laws.html#ixzz4HWdMn2Zm
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