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Wednesday, August 09, 2006
Walter E. Williams :: Townhall.com Columnist
The minimum wage vision
by Walter E. Williams
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There are decent people, without a selfish hidden agenda, who support increases in minimum wages as a means to help low-skilled workers, and there are other decent people, with the identical goal, who strongly oppose increases in the minimum wage. So the question is: How can people who share the same goals, helping low-skilled workers, come up with polar opposite means that produce polar opposite results?

It all depends on one's initial premise. It would do us some good to make our initial premises explicit and check them against reality. One initial premise is that an employer needs a certain number of workers to accomplish a given task. That being the case, increasing the minimum wage simply means that all low-skilled workers will enjoy a higher salary and employers will have lower profits and/or customers will pay higher prices. With this vision of how the world operates, the logic of increasing the minimum wage as a means of helping low-skilled workers is impeccable.

Another initial premise is that there is no fixed number of workers necessary to accomplish a given task. Employers might be able to substitute capital for labor such as using dishwashing machines instead of dishwashers, automatic elevators instead of elevator operators, self-service gasoline stations rather than full-service gasoline stations, online reservations rather than reservation clerks or relocating their operation overseas. People who share this initial premise can still have concern for the welfare of low-skilled workers but argue that increasing minimum wages will cause unemployment for some of them and deny job opportunities for others. Given their initial premise, the logic of their argument is also impeccable.

Thus, the question to decide is which initial premise best describes how the world operates. Is it the one that says there's a fixed number of workers necessary to perform a given task, or the one that says employers have flexibility in the mix of workers and capital they use and where in the world they can choose to manufacture? I think the latter description more properly describes how the world operates.

Place yourself in the position of an employer and ask: If a worker costs me, say, $7 in wages, plus mandated fringes such as Social Security, unemployment compensation, sick and vacation leave, making the true hourly cost of hiring a worker $9 an hour, does it pay me to hire a worker who's so unfortunate to have skills that enable him to produce only $5 or $6 worth of value per hour? Most employers would conclude that doing so would be a losing economic proposition.

There are a couple other villains in the piece that force employers to respond to increases in wages that exceed a worker's productivity. If he did hire such workers, he would earn lower profits. Soon, investors would abandon him and put their money where returns are higher.

There's another villain -- the customer. If the employer retained workers whose wages exceeded their productivity, to cover his costs he would have to charge you and me higher product or service prices. I don't know about you, but I prefer lower prices to higher prices, and I'd switch my patronage to those firms who adjusted to the higher labor cost.

Congress can easily mandate higher wages, but they cannot mandate higher worker productivity or that employers hire a particular worker in the first place. Those of us who truly care about the welfare of low-skilled workers should focus our energies on helping them to become more productive, and a good start would be to do something about the rotten education that many receive.

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About The Author
Dr. Williams serves on the faculty of George Mason University as John M. Olin Distinguished Professor of Economics and is the author of More Liberty Means Less Government: Our Founders Knew This Well.
 
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Subject: Educate them properly...
Everybody should be required to read "The Law" by Bastiet. There are no free lunches in the private or public sector.

Dwayne

steve-o writes:
mistaken assumption on tax rate
A 23% taxrate is just that. When you spend $1.00
the tax is .23 bringing the total to $1.23.
===============================

Not sure if you mean fair tax act or not but, the fair tax act is very clear that the 23% rate is the "income tax equivilant" and the sales tax, according their own site, will be 30%.

As 77 cent itme will cost a $1. The 23 cents tax is 30% of 77 cents.

This is from the act itself.
quote:
`(2) FOR YEARS AFTER 2005- For years after the calendar year 2005, the rate of tax is the combined Federal tax rate percentage (as defined in paragraph (3) of the gross payments for the taxable property or service.

`(3) COMBINED FEDERAL TAX RATE PERCENTAGE- The combined Federal tax rate percentage is the sum of--

`(A) the general revenue rate (as defined in paragraph (4), and

`(B) the old-age, survivors and disability insurance rate, and

`(C) the hospital insurance rate.

`(4) GENERAL REVENUE RATE- The general revenue rate shall be 14.91 percent.

`(c) COORDINATION WITH IMPORT DUTIES- The tax imposed by this section is in addition to any import duties imposed by chapter 4 of title 19. The Secretary shall provide by regulation that, to the maximum extent practicable, the tax imposed by this section on imported taxable property and services is collected and administered in conjunction with any applicable import duties imposed by the United States.

`(d) Liability for Tax-

`(1) IN GENERAL- The person using or consuming taxable property or services in the United States is liable for the tax imposed by this section, except as provided in paragraph (2) of this subsection.

`(2) EXCEPTION WHERE TAX PAID TO SELLER- A person using or consuming a taxable property or service in the United States is not liable for the tax imposed by this section if the person pays the tax to a person selling the taxable property or service and receives from such person a purchaser's receipt within the meaning of section 510.
http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/F?c108:1:./temp/~c1087Z28LD:e9292:
===========================
As you can see, the 23% is on "gross payment." $1 is the gross payment on a 77 cent item. 77% of the gross payment is the item and 23% is the tax. However, the 23 cents is 30% of 77 cents and that is where the 30% rate comes in.

Remember this was to be revenue neutral.

If you earn $1.30 and tax it at 23% you have a $1. If you buy something with that dollar, and add 30% you are back to $1.30. That is revenue neutral, as the act calls for.

Here is another site from the Fair Tax org. that uses the 23% rate with a term that means 30% added.
quote:
14. Apply a 23% tax-inclusive rate sales tax on the purchase of New Goods and services in the U.S. Note: Used Goods and Education costs (example: College Tuition) are not subject to the FairTax.
http://www.geocities.com/cmcofer/plan2.html
=====================
notice 23% "TAX-INCLUSIVE" which means 23% of the total cost is the tax but the tax added is 30%

Here is another page from the Fair Tax organization about the rate:
quote:
1. The 23% "FairTax" National Retail Sales Tax [NRST] is really 30%, and both are too high. God didn't ask for more than 10%.

The Flat Income Tax and our existing Progressive/Graduated Income Tax are figured as a "percent of income", and in order to compare apples to apples, a National Retail Sales Tax must also be figured as a "percent of income", called "Tax Inclusive".

It is incorrect to compare the FairTax NRST to state sales tax rates that tax money that has already been taxed through the income and payroll tax. State sales taxes are considered "Tax Exclusive". Anyway you figure it, the amount of the tax is the same.

Let's look at an income of $5,000 per month.

$5,000 x 23.00% = $1,150 (Tax Inclusive)
$5,000 - $1,150 = $3,850
$3,850 x 29.87% = $1,150 (Tax Exclusive)

Notice that the blue numbers are the same? Whether a man is measured as 6 feet tall or 72 inches tall, he is still the same height.
http://www.geocities.com/cmcofer/six.html
=============================
So, I too, prefer thinking of it as 23% but some will nitpick and say it is 30% or in this case, 29.87%.

But don't forget the rebate, so even the 23% rate is higher than real life, especially for low income people who if below the poverty level, will pay 0% for their purchases because all tax in their case is rebated.

By the way, I was thinking that if they issue a "debit card" instead of checks, it gets around the cost of mailing, locating recipients on trips, and can be even distributed weekly so people who have little spending discipline would have a new source of tax rebate each week as they purchase that weeks groceries. Issue it once a month and many will spend it all immediately and then have nothing for help in purchases made later in the month.

Even though I am not a fan of rebates at all, this plan is the fairest for low income people of any I have seen for tax reform.
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