Work which gives you a sense of worth, stacking shelves is a worthwhile job because it needs doing, sitting at a desk trying to entertain yourself for 9 hours because you're only there to make up the numbers, is not. ymmv
I do not refer to the financial reward being 'worth' getting out of bed for.
Pretty sure if the pay was the same, most people would rather arse about and do nothing than stack shelves, hence the benefits trap.
You're a labour supporter then?
Let me guess, you consider these jobs good enough for everybody else but not you? (as you are above them & thankfully possess the skills not to have to do them).Define 'worthwhile' work. There are loads of **** jobs that need to be done, and part of the problem is that many people don't believe it is worth them doing those jobs.
Who else is going to do them then? Immigrants? Nope, that leads to the current "Immigrants are stealing all the jobs I don't want to do, boohoo!" mindset many people have.
I guess it raises the question, if these are important jobs which need doing - why do they pay so little?.
demotivated working 40 hours a week & having nothing to show for it at the end.
I guess it raises the question, if these are important jobs which need doing - why do they pay so little?.
I'm not even advocating communism, but I don't think these "selfish nature arguments" hold water.elmarko1234, with reference to your last post quoting mine.
Ultimately what I am trying to say is no matter how nice we become morally, no matter how much empathy we develop there will always be selfish instincts that can't be overriden (which we share with other elements of nature) and which would ultimately see communism fail.
Not anybody can do them to a reasonable standard, neither is the work done to a high standard by people who are paid peanuts.Because anybody can do them. Pretty simple really?
A home, car & holidays on minimum wage?, are you kidding me?.Home, family, car, sky tv, holidays - why is this having nothing to show for it and why is it so little? Because it's less than somebody in a skilled profession?
And un-skilled jobs pay less than skilled because there is a larger labour pool for the un-skilled, it's always been like that. It's only a problem when we let ourselves measure our self-worth by our pay packet.
A home, car & holidays on minimum wage?, are you kidding me?.
Well, overall the most educated people will have a better view on how to solve problems than the average person - not to mention scientists are usually motivated for more noble reason than either the acquisition of wealth or power.elmarko1234, we are actually pretty close politically speaking. I too favour a technocracy (although that too brings it's own problems like who decides that person X is the oracle on subject Y and how you make them lose all political/worldview bias when making decisions) and think democracy is over-rated (Turkeys don't vote Christmas even if Christmas is what they need).
But a technocracy is how you'd make up the governing body. Communism relates to the economic system you use so they are not mutally exclusive concepts.
Ok,No, I'm not. It's very much the norm.
No, I'm not. It's very much the norm.
No, I'm not. It's very much the norm.
No, I'm not. It's very much the norm.
Ok,
UK Min wage = 6.08 an hour at last check - that's £243.2 a week, £12,646 per year.
For a house the most you could borrow would be £50,584 per month - with a monthly repayment of £223.67 for 35 years (tracker/repayment).
That's £927.74 a month (After tax).
house £223.67
ctax £70.41
energy £83.33 - yeah, ok, our 4 bed detached house is currently running on around £70/month elec/water/oil so 83 is a gross estimating for someone being frugal. Perhaps £50?
phone £40 - poor people do not need, nor can they afford a £40/month phone. Don't be ridiculous. Reduce that to £15 and you will be nearer the mark.
food £151 - for one person? It is possible to live on £25 a week as a single person - £100.
Car/run/ins £250 - driving is a priveledge, not a right, earning NMW isn't really conducive with running a car in the UK.
clths/misc £30
Leaves about £20 a week left, for living... - or £438 left over for the frugal lifestyle. That doesn't include a bus pass or rail card or whatever as I have no idea how much they cost.
Well, overall the most educated people will have a better view on how to solve problems than the average person - not to mention scientists are usually motivated for more noble reason than either the acquisition of wealth or power.
You can't trust individuals (self serving & lack the knowledge) - not that it matters as we live in a plutocracy anyway.
Politicians are too concerned with getting voted in (which deviates from the intended purpose (running the country).
The rich tend to be wealthy from a strong desire to obtain greater wealth, which will rarely be in line with the interests of the rest of the population (So business leaders are out of the race also).
I'll take a group who's main focus is on "being right" over any of the above groups any-day.
Regarding the economic point, I'd apply the same scientific principle to the economy as the social structure - so money would once again become an abstract construct.
I doubt we will move from capitalism any-time soon, people are afraid of change, don't care, ignorant politically, caught up in life (can't blame them for this one - life is transitory) or apathetic on the issue (again, can't blame them).
My thoughts, increase lowest wages to around £18,000 - changes that £20 a week to something a little better at £76 a week (a 370% increase in disposable income about)
A little increase at the bottom would make a big difference in the quality of life of many.
Doing so would push up the operating costs of all the businesses that people use, so they will need to up their prices, rendering the increase somewhat moot.