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Minimum Wage Cruelty
· Wednesday, April 14, 2010
Which allows an American Samoan worker to have a higher standard of living: being employed at $3.26 per hour or unemployed at a wage scheduled to annually increase by 50 cents until it reaches federally mandated wages at $7.25? You say, "Williams, that's a stupid question. Who would support people being unemployed at $7.25 an hour over being employed at $3.26 an hour?" That's precisely the outcome of Congress' 2007 increases in the minimum wage. Chicken of the Sea International moved its operation from Samoa to a highly automated cannery plant in Lyon, Georgia. That resulted in roughly 2,000 jobs lost in Samoa and a gain of 200 jobs in Georgia.
Given Samoa's low cost of living, $3.26 provided Samoan workers a higher standard of living than some of their neighbors on other islands. Now these workers are unemployed. What's worse is that Starkist, Chicken of the Sea's competitor, might leave the island as well. If that happens, increases in the minimum wage will have cost more than 8,000 jobs in Samoa's canneries and related industries; that's nearly half of its labor force. Samoan standard of living will be further reduced by the increased cost of goods it imports. Ships delivering goods from the U.S. and elsewhere to Samoa will not have as much cargo on their return trips, making shipping a costlier proposition.
Cannery jobs flourished in Samoa because of its location and it was one of the few American territories exempted from the minimum wage. Even the proposed 2007 increases in the minimum wage exempted Samoa. Since Del Monte, Starkist's parent company, is headquartered in Speaker Pelosi's San Francisco district and Chicken of the Sea is based in Southern California, Republicans had a field day suggesting that Pelosi's calling for Samoa to be exempted from the increases in the minimum wage reflected political payoffs and a conflict of interest. I thought that as well, as suggested in my May 9, 2007 column, but exempting American Samoa from minimum wage increases would have been the most compassionate act, short of minimum wage repeal.
The unemployment effect of minimum wages isn't restricted to American Samoa but to the mainland U.S. as well. Overall teenage unemployment stands at a record 25 percent while adult unemployment hovers around 10 percent. Also at a record high is the 50 percent unemployment rate among black teenage males. One might ask why teen unemployment, particularly that among black teens, is so much higher than adult unemployment. The answer is simple. One effect of a minimum wage law is that of discrimination against the employment of less-preferred workers. Within the category of less-preferred workers are those with low skills. Teens are disproportionately represented among such workers and are therefore more adversely affected by minimum wages. Black teens are disproportionately represented among teens with low skills and therefore share a greater burden of minimum wages.
One of the more insidious effects of minimum wages is that it lowers the cost of racial discrimination; in fact, minimum wage laws are one of the most effective tools in the arsenals of racists everywhere, as demonstrated by just a couple of examples. During South Africa's apartheid era, its racist unions were the major supporters of minimum wages for blacks. South Africa's Wage Board said, "The method would be to fix a minimum rate for an occupation or craft so high that no Native would likely be employed." In the U.S., in the aftermath of a strike by the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen, when the arbitration board decreed that blacks and whites were to be paid equal wages, the white unionists expressed their delight saying, "If this course of action is followed by the company and the incentive for employing the Negro thus removed, the strike will not have been in vain."
Tragically, minimum wages have the unquestioned support of good-hearted, well-meaning people with little understanding who become the useful idiots of charlatans, quacks and racists.
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robert abdoo
This was an interesting piece, and not just because it fit my own preconceptions. This is probably only the second time I have seen minimum wage laws equated with racism (and used as a tool to promote non-white unemployment), and I think that the subject needs to be discussed more. Especially in my hometown of Detroit.
The leaders of Detroit and Michigan have failed to realize that having city and state mandated minimum wage rules higher than the federal standard has forced an exodus of jobs from the region. As example, though we are known as the "orange barrel state", the barrels are all imported from Ohio (if memory serves) because they cannot be produced as cheaply here, despite our technological and manufacturing edge over most of the world. The rules are, if it's made in Michigan and sold to the state, the workers must be paid over $12 an hour in wages and benefits. This makes everywhere else about $5 an hour more competitive since most of the labor involved is fairly low skilled. Detroit was the first place in the state to make this type of rule, and then the state followed suit. It was invented and promoted by black leaders as a benefit to their constituents. This had strong support from unions.
In this instance, it was a black on black crime, and it wasn't until the state got involved that it became a white on black crime. The results are plain to see. An almost utter lack of hope for gainful employment for large numbers of Detroit youth, and increasingly for Michigan youth. Detroit is especially hard hit because public education is so shockingly bad that less than half of the students actually graduate high school, despite social promotions that turn out illiterate graduates. Having no skills whatsoever is not a good thing since the fallback plan is usually unskilled crimes to make money. Which in turn has made Detroit famous for being a dangerous place. It most definitely is, as dead friends will attest.
Posted April 19, 2010 at 10:02:04 PM
Nate Kruk
Funny we never hear the other side of this, what happes to the people earning minimum wage now if minimum wage goes away THEY LOOSE THEIR JOBS to lower skilled people willing to slave for less (yes i use the term slave)ill call your bluff YES i rather earn NOTHING than 3hr if i only make enough to go to and from work i have NOTHING anyways and the remiss of this artice is "blacks are to stupid to find a minimum wage job better lower the standard for them"
im sure someone robbing a store would LOVE a 2 hr job,(eyes rolling) Robert get a clue do you run a business? if so i fear to see what you pay people
Posted May 10, 2010 at 3:23:23 PM