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- Newsgroups: alt.politics.libertarian
- Path: sparky!uunet!stanford.edu!agate!linus!alliant!russ
- From: russ@alliant.com (Russell McFatter)
- Subject: Minimum wage and utopia
- Message-ID: <1993Jan25.220303.10713@alliant.com>
- Organization: Alliant Computer Systems
- References: <parvin1.727938404@husc.harvard.edu> <C1F327.GD2@athena.cs.uga.edu>
- Date: Mon, 25 Jan 1993 22:03:03 GMT
- Lines: 158
-
- Minimum Wage requirements aren't the only disincentive to employment, but
- they certainly are one. A few aspects of this issue are perpetually
- missed by those people debating the issue.
-
- Even employers who pay more than the minimum wage get zapped for all sorts
- of taxes, fees, regulations, and other expenses related to employment.
- The more obvious and more expensive ones include the employer-side
- Social Security and disability/employment taxes: These are taxes which are
- based on the employee's wages. These are both "hidden" from employees--
- such that someone who "earns" $30,000 and "gets" $20,000 does not know
- that their employer is kicking in another $5,000-$10,000 on their behalf.
- Essentially, the employee "earns" $40,000 but "gets" $20,000-- the tax is
- "divided" between employer and employee, essentially, because the citizens
- would most likely revolt if they knew how much of their money went to
- taxes. (The same "divide and conquer" attack is used by states who have
- a consumer-side and retailer-side sales tax.)
-
- It is generally in the government's disinterest for the public to know
- exactly how much tax they are paying. Thus the Reagan "tax cut", which
- merely shifted tax burden from individuals to businesses. How many
- companies would have survived the recession-- how many people would still
- be employed today-- if it wasn't for this burden?
-
- A typical "small business" faces situations like this:
-
- o Verifying the employability of a particular person (employers
- are held liable for accepting false or forged identification).
-
- o Spending $250-$550 to "file" a "Hazardous Materials Disclosure
- Form", even when there are no hazardous materials to disclose.
-
- o Responsibility for accurate and detailed hours recording for
- non-exempt employees
-
- o Mandated benefits packages
-
- o EEO and Affirmative Action compliance
-
- o Employee Assistance and other "social" programs.
-
- Expect to see a trend towards businesses disclosing these costs to
- employees as time goes on-- they're already doing so with health care
- costs in many places.
-
- The real expense to a small business, however, is usually that of hiring
- yet another employee merely to read the ever-changing requirements and
- handle the voluminous paperwork that results. These kinds of regulations
- spawned an entire business of their own: "Human Resources".
-
- Effects: The forgotten effects of Minumum Wage laws, and employment
- restrictions, are also the most ominous: complete elimination of job
- positions. Businesses across the country are continuing to experiment
- with ways to permanently eliminate job positions as the "penalty" for
- employing people is increased. In some ways, we don't even notice the
- slow evolution-- we're used to waiting in line for the single "self-serve"
- cashier at the gas station-- and are now being taught to use credit card
- terminals instead. We use automated telephone systems to get information
- on our bank accounts, order products and services of all sorts. I've
- even used an experimental order-taking "ATM" at a fast-food restaurant--
- it takes your order (including special orders) and your money, gives
- change and a receipt-- and the food appears at the counter shortly
- thereafter ("Touch 'N Go Self Service Ordering," which has been touring
- various Burger King restaurants). At Service Merchandise's catalog
- showrooms, we no longer just enter order numbers on the Silent Sam
- terminals, but we even authorize our own credit card transaction-- the
- person at the pick-up counter merely moves our purchase from the conveyor
- behind her to the counter where we wait.
-
- If you're like me, you'd be asking one powerful question at this point:
- Is there anything fundamentally wrong with a future where machines do all
- of the drudgery of which they are possible? Why should a human life be
- "wasted" doing something that technology can do as well-- or better
- (especially in the case of Service Merchandise or self-serve cashiers!)?
-
- The answer, of course, is... no. The employment restrictions-- even
- minimum wage laws-- serve, more than anything else, to hasten both
- inflation, and the installation of technology to replace human workers.
- The human workers would have been replaced anyway, once the maturity
- technology and acceptance of the public made the replacement feasible.
- There will be, simply, less of the kind of work that we do now-- and a
- trend towards creative effort-- research, development, arts, and, of
- course, service.
-
- If this is the ultimate goal of technology-- more reward for less work--
- why are there homeless? Why are people starving?
-
- The answer is that, while the cost of luxuries such as consumer electronics
- and such has dropped, the basic cost of living-- food, clothing, and
- shelter, has gone through the roof in comparison. Consider the telephone--
- one would think that, with all of the advanced reliability and
- configurability of the dial network, with electronics operating nearly
- every aspect of the system and even diagnosing itself, that the cost of
- operation, per subscriber, would be practically zero. Basic service rates,
- however, are higher than they've ever been, and show no sign of
- decelerating. Anybody who's bought a bag of groceries knows that neither
- technology nor the recession has put a dent in those prices-- and many
- of the stores themselves are losing money, too. By the time that the
- farmers, processors, packagers, truckers, and retailers all get their
- "cut" and pay all of the taxes, nearly the entire value of the product has
- been siphoned away (did you know? Of $1.00 spent in the supermarket, less
- than $0.05 represents the contribution of the farmer who grew the food in
- the first place).
-
- As for shelter-- even if you're not renting a house, paying condominium
- fees, or paying a mortgage-- you need plenty of cash just to keep what
- land/house you've got. Essentially, the government is the ultimate
- landlord-- one which charges rent based on the assessed value of your
- property, year after year. Consider this: If your property tax is
- "$25 per $1000", the government will have "taken" your property (the entire
- value of it) in just 40 years. At "$40 per $1000", it takes just 25
- years. By the end of a 30-year mortgage, it means you have paid more in
- taxes for the privilege of keeping your own house than the house itself is
- worth-- as if, every 25-40 years, the tax collector simply came along and
- took your property, forcing you to buy another home with your own money.
- (If you think this doesn't happen, check your newspaper for the amazing
- number of FDIC, bank-owned and IRS properties for sale every day.
- Consider: most of these properties were taken from a person who was
- unable to afford the basic "food, clothing, shelter" expenses.)
-
- The cruellest form of taxation is taxation on necessities-- those things
- whose purchase cannot be avoided, if one wishes to remain alive.
- Theoretically, the "standard deduction" and "personal exemptions" of the
- US income tax are designed to "protect" the part of one's income used for
- these necessities. It can be argued that the amount doesn't come close--
- but, despite this, the truth is that these necessities ARE taxed many
- times, but the tax is "hidden" from the purchaser much as the employer-side
- taxes are "hidden" from employees. You may not pay sales tax on a bag of
- flour, but the farmer paid taxes on the land, the truckers paid taxes on
- the truck, fuel, and income-- the store paid taxes on its property, and you
- paid, indirectly, for taxes on the wages of the person who slid that bag
- of flour through the UPC scanner-- thus the government earns far more on
- this transaction than the flour was worth.
-
- Now, of course, you "swipe" the credit card yourself.
-
-
- What needs to be changed:
-
- 1: Eliminate taxation on non-income such as property, excise, and
- inheritance taxes.
-
- 2: Eliminate meaningless "hidden" taxation, so individuals really
- know how much of their money is being taxed.
-
- 3: Eliminate "secondary" taxes on necessities such as food,
- transportation, clothing, and shelter, in order to bring the
- prices down to an affordable level.
-
- 4: Support advances in technology which brings down the cost of
- basic needs, rather than other technologies.
-
- 5: Support population control efforts.
-
-
-
- --- Russell McFatter [russ@alliant.COM]
- std. disclaimers apply.
-
-