Deleted member 66701
Deleted member 66701
.dbl post
I'm curious about this tax credit stuff as I've never really paid attention to the details. Surely it's a bad solution to a simple problem? If we can get wages up and provide a decent number of hours of free, quality child care then both parents could start working, both could be contributing to the economy and the family could be better off with no tax credits needed? Surely it can't be better to have someone at home being paid for by the taxpayer?
I'm curious about this tax credit stuff as I've never really paid attention to the details. Surely it's a bad solution to a simple problem? If we can get wages up and provide a decent number of hours of free, quality child care then both parents could start working, both could be contributing to the economy and the family could be better off with no tax credits needed? Surely it can't be better to have someone at home with the taxpayer subsidising living costs?
Forcing wages up, just forces prices up
reducing demand
(and hence jobs)
or just forces the jobs abroad
If you say so.
Yes, undoubtadely, it's even one of the things the board that decides what to set the minimum wage to has to consider in terms of offsetting loss of jobs against the benefits of the wage increase.Did the minimum wage do it?
Absolutely. But you also have to remember we operate in a global market these days. So yay if you still have a job, not so yay if you don't.Or an increase in the minimum wage could give people more disposable income, so you sell more of your product, and the economies of scale take effect.
It's a huge over simplification to say that a wage increase means a product cost increase which would wipe the increase out. Wages are only one element of the total costs of getting products to market.
Forcing wages up, just forces prices up, reducing demand (and hence jobs) or just forces the jobs abroad so it's not just a simple case of making employers pay more.
Not sure what the government can do, usually driven by investment in new technology and processes by companies themselves. The theory is that job losses in this past recession were absorbed to a degree by producitivty decreasing.Which is why productivity is so important. If British goods are expensive but the quality is superior to a similar product from somewhere else then there will always be a market for it.
Productivity seems to be a bit of a government buzzword at the moment but I haven't seen any real efforts made to improve it.
From 1950 to 1980, during the good old days of U.S. economic might—the era in which the Great American Middle Class was created—corporate profits averaged a healthy 6 percent of GDP. But since then, corporate profits have doubled to more than 12 percent of GDP.
That’s about a trillion dollars more a year in profit. And since then, wages as a percentage of GDP have fallen, you guessed it, by about the same 6 percent or 7 percent of GDP. Coincidence? Probably not. What very few Americans seem to understand is that that extra trillion dollars isn’t profit because it had to be, or needs to be or should be. That extra trillion dollars is profit because powerful people like me prefer it to be. It could have been spent on your wages. Or it could have gone into discounts to you, the consumer. We capitalists will tell you that our increasing profits are the result of some complex economic force with the immutability and righteousness of divine law. But the truth is, it is simply a result of a difference in negotiating power. As in, we have it. And you don’t.
Not sure what the government can do, usually driven by investment in new technology and processes by companies themselves. The theory is that job losses in this past recession were absorbed to a degree by producitivty decreasing.
I think at the time they were more risk averse to take loans on.I believe they attempted to do it by releasing cash to banks to loan to small/medium businesses so they could invest, but for whatever reason it never worked out that way.
Yes, undoubtadely, it's even one of the things the board that decides what to set the minimum wage to has to consider in terms of offsetting loss of jobs against the benefits of the wage increase.
Good to see that the people setting the minimum wage are doing a responsible job.