Unit2Sucks said:Tom, you can't be serious.concordtom said:
There's no way to bring manufacturing home given our minimum wage laws (and regulations) price us out of a global market. Talk of this by all politicians is just an empty rallying call.
Minimum wage has virtually no impact on manufacturing wages in the US. Federal minimum wage is still $7.25 per hour and we do not have a ready supply of manufacturing workers at that salary. Minimum wage jobs are predominantly in food prep and service-related work and represent only about 1% of hourly workers.
Fearmongering over any raise to the $7 minimum wage bankrupting small businesses is just GOP fearmongering. Sure, not all businesses can survive at $15, $20 or beyond, but the number of people willing to work below $10 per hour (which is far from a living wage in the US) is quite small.
Ford pays its Mexican autoworkers a minimum wage of ~$8.25 per hour. Autoworkers in China make $2-4 per hour (source). Autoworkers in the US make ~$28 per hour (source).
There are certain industries and products where manufacturing in the US still makes a ton of sense. My water heater, furnace, A/C compressor, garage door opener and all of my appliances (w/d, dishwasher, refrigerator, etc.) were all made in the US.
Healthy debate!
Thank you!
I haven't done reading or analysis on the numbers in decades. I appreciate you putting numbers to the discussion.
I think the 2-4 in China vs 28 in US supports my posit.
No?
We live in a globally competitive world. The more we raise wages by mandate rather than through the equalizing invisible hand, the more we price ourselves out of domestic production - the more we raise fast food wages the more food costs for ourselves.
Of course, I want everyone to have a living wage. But it's not an economic solution to mandate where price levels should be, either for goods or for labor.