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- Path: sparky!uunet!charon.amdahl.com!amdahl!rtech!sgiblab!spool.mu.edu!torn!news.ccs.queensu.ca!qucdn!spraggej
- Organization: Queen's University at Kingston
- Date: Thu, 28 Jan 1993 05:18:49 EST
- From: John G. Spragge <SPRAGGEJ@QUCDN.QueensU.CA>
- Message-ID: <93028.051849SPRAGGEJ@QUCDN.QueensU.CA>
- Newsgroups: can.politics
- Subject: Re: On minimum wages
- References: <1993Jan26.201903.19780@sni.ca> <1993Jan27.034716.12266@ee.ubc.ca>
- <93027.133549SPRAGGEJ@QUCDN.QueensU.CA> <1993Jan27.203017.6434@csi.uottawa.ca>
- Lines: 28
-
- In article <1993Jan27.203017.6434@csi.uottawa.ca>, cbbrowne@csi.uottawa.ca
- (Christopher Browne) says:
-
- >If (as you suggest), we ought to deny that the "value" of human labour
- >can be determined using economic means, then that suggests that there
- >is NO valid evaluation of wages, and that a robber baron's guess at
- >the correct wages is as good as whatever you might propose.
-
- This does not follow.
-
- Each human being deserves a basic respect. People who fail to accord
- others this basic respect do not deserve (and often do not get)
- respect themselves. Thus, all our relations (even our economic ones)
- must include this basic respect. And wage disparities beyond a
- certain amount can not but convey a deep disrespect. How can you
- respect someone when you say their time, their lives, have less
- value than the minimum they need for basic subsistence?
-
- In this way, we make an important decision: we subordinate the
- power of the marketplace to our respect for individual lives. This
- does not mean we completely deny the right of the marketplace
- to set wages. Minimum wage laws do not demand that computer
- programmers and street sweepers be paid alike; they simply set
- a floor. They say that to dispose of an hour of a human life,
- you must pay at least enough money to indicate your respect for that
- person.
-
- standard disclaimers apply ----------------------- John G. Spragge
-