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The-Bus | 2 months ago

If a business can't pay a living wage, it's not really a successful business. I, too, could become fabulously wealthy selling shoes if someone just have me shoes for $1 so I could resell them for $50.

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AnthonyMouse|2 months ago

> If a business can't pay a living wage, it's not really a successful business.

Let's consider the implications of this. We take an existing successful business, change absolutely nothing about it, but separately and for unrelated reasons the local population increases and the government prohibits the construction of new housing.

Now real estate is more scarce and the business has to pay higher rent, so they're making even less than before and there is nothing there for them to increase wages with. Meanwhile the wages they were paying before are now "not a living wage" because housing costs went way up.

Is it this business who is morally culpable for this result, or the zoning board?

FireBeyond|2 months ago

There are certainly elements of this. And there are also elements like my city, where some of the more notable local business owners and developers are all _way too cozy_ with the City Council and Planning/Zoning Boards (like not just rubbing shoulders at community events, fundraisers, but in the "our families rent AirBnBs together and go on vacation together) which gives them greater influence.

All that being said, though, Robert Heinlein said once:

> There has grown up in the minds of certain groups in this country the notion that because a man or corporation has made a profit out of the public for a number of years, the government and the courts are charged with the duty of guaranteeing such profit in the future, even in the face of changing circumstances and contrary to the public interest. This strange doctrine is not supported by statute or common law. Neither individuals nor corporations have any right to come into court and ask that the clock of history be stopped, or turned back.

array_key_first|2 months ago

Successfulness and morality are orthogonal. If you can't make money wherever you're operating your business, then you're not successful.

raw_anon_1111|2 months ago

Can we use the same argument for all of the businesses that are only surviving because of VC money?

I find it rich how many tech people are working for money losing companies, using technology from money losing companies and/or trying to start a money losing company and get funding from a VC.

Every job is not meant to support a single person living on their own raising a family.

dpkirchner|2 months ago

That's what VC money is for. When it comes to paying below a living wage, we typically expect the government to provide support to make up the difference (so they're not literally homeless). Businesses that rely on government to pay their employees should not exist.

CamperBob2|2 months ago

Classically, not all jobs are considered "living wage" jobs. That whole notion is something some people made up very recently.

A teenager in his/her first job at McDonald's doesn't need a "living wage." As a result of forcing the issue, now the job doesn't exist at all in many instances... and if it does, the owner has a strong incentive to automate it away.

autoexec|2 months ago

> A teenager in his/her first job at McDonald's doesn't need a "living wage." As a result of forcing the issue, now the job doesn't exist at all in many instances

The majority of minimum wage workers are adults, not teenagers. This is also true for McDonald's employees. The idea that these jobs are staffed by children working summer jobs is simply not reality.

Anyone working for someone else, doing literally anything for 40 hours a week, should be entitled to enough compensation to support themselves at a minimum. Any employer offering less than that is either a failed business that should die off and make room for one that's better managed or a corporation that is just using public taxpayer money to subsidize their private labor expenses.

kube-system|2 months ago

A teenager is presumably also going to school full time and works their job part time, not ~2000 hours per year.

If we build a society where someone working a full time job is not able to afford to reasonably survive, we are setting ourselves up for a society of crime, poverty, and disease.

swiftcoder|2 months ago

> A teenager in his/her first job at McDonald's doesn't need a "living wage."

Turns out our supply of underage workers is neither infinite, nor even sufficient to staff all fast food jobs in the nation

array_key_first|2 months ago

Just the simple fact that mcdonalds is open during school hours is enough to demolish the "teenagers flipping burgers" type arguments.

jfindper|2 months ago

>A teenager in his/her first job at McDonald's doesn't need a "living wage."

Wow, a completely bad-faith argument.

Can you try again, but this time, try "steelman" instead of "strawman"?