PRO/CON: Should fast-food employees earn a living wage?

Similar documents
PRO/CON: Should fast-food employees earn a living wage?

PRO/CON: Should the fast-food industry pay better wages?

PRO/CON: Is Snowden a whistle-blower or just irresponsible?

PRO/CON: Should sanctuary cities lose their federal funding?

The Three Great Thinkers Who Changed Economics

In class, we have framed poverty in four different ways: poverty in terms of

If it becomes a law, here is what the new health care bill will mean

PRO/CON: Should U.S. governors be able to block Syrian refugees?

How new health care bill will change current health system if it passes

PRO/CON: Does Trump get thumbs-up or thumbs-down after first 100 days?

PART 1B NAME & SURNAME: THE EFFECTS OF GLOBALIZATION

The ten years since the start of the Great Recession have done little to address

Running head: THE AMERICAN DREAM. The American Dream: Dead, Alive, or on Hold? Brandon King University of Cincinnati

Page 2

MITT ROMNEY DELIVERS REMARKS TO NALEO: GROWING OPPORTUNITY FOR ALL AMERICANS

JACK KEMP SPEECH TUESDAY, JULY 15, 1980 LADIES AND GENTLEMEN:

Increasing to the United States Minimum Wage: An Ethical Discussion

INEQUALITY: POVERTY AND WEALTH CHAPTER 2

By Andrew Soergel Economy Reporter Dec. 9, 2016

Overview. Importance of Issues to Voters

Change versus more of the same: On-going panel of target voting groups provides path for Democrats in 2018

2003 UNITED STATES HISTORY FREE-RESPONSE QUESTIONS

UNITED STATES HISTORY SECTION II Part A (Suggested writing time minutes) Percent of Section II score -- 45

Voters Support Bold Economic Agenda

Politicians: Alexander Hamilton

Overview: The World Community from

A Pivotal Political Moment on Health Care. July 31, 2012

From The Collected Works of Milton Friedman, compiled and edited by Robert Leeson and Charles G. Palm.

MADE IN THE U.S.A. The U.S. Manufacturing Sector is Poised for Growth

Broken Laws, Workers. etaliation orkers comp. and Labor Laws in America s Cities

Obama s Economic Agenda S T E V E C O H E N C O L U M B I A U N I V E R S I T Y F A L L

Framing the 2010 election

Introduction. Is It Time to Abolish the Minimum Wage? Nate Moroney, Josh Carlson, Andreas Syz. April 5, 2004

Unions Make the Middle Class

$15. Bigger paychecks, more good jobs, & thriving communities. Why raising the minimum wage is good for everyone in North Carolina.

The debate over Canada's poverty line

Mrs. Morgan s Class. (and how it works)

CASE 12: INCOME INEQUALITY, POVERTY, AND JUSTICE

Edexcel (A) Economics A-level

Health Care for Everyone

World Changing Events by Rick Joyner

The Working Poor. Michael A. Arata. December 16, 2016

Globalization: It Doesn t Just Happen

Insecure work and Ethnicity

Michigan: State-by-State Immigration Trends Introduction Foreign-Born Population Educational Attainment

Lesson 10 What Is Economic Justice?

RESEARCH BRIEF: The State of Black Workers before the Great Recession By Sylvia Allegretto and Steven Pitts 1

Federal Pre-Budget Submission

AQA Economics A-level

PRO/CON: Stopping Syrian refugees from coming to the U.S.

Mexican Migrant Workers in the 20th Century By Jessica McBirney 2016

%: Will grow the economy vs. 39%: Will grow the economy.

England Riots Survey August Summary of findings

US History The End of Prosperity The Big Idea Main Ideas

Full Text of PG Sittenfeld's Remarks "The Future I See" Thursday, May 14, 2015 Columbus

Taiwan's shrinking population: The 1.5-million-baby challenge

Reaganomics. Jessica Brown December 6, 2012 Cassandra L. Clark - American Civilization

The Big Decisions Ahead on Economic Renewal and Reduced Debt

You ve probably heard a lot of talk about

World Leaders: Mao Zedong

Trillion-dollar bills : gains from a borderless world. Prof. Goldstein Economic Demography Econ/Demog C175 Week 11, Lecture A UC Berkeley Spring 2018

Franklin Roosevelt and the New Deal

LECTURE. King v. Burwell and the Rule of Law. Key Points. The Honorable Orrin G. Hatch

A Preliminary Snapshot

Chapter 12: Exploring Economic Equality. Understandings of Economic Equality

The First Hundred Days relief, recovery, and reform John Maynard Keynes The Banking Acts Emergency Banking Relief Act BAILOUT

Being President. Formal Requirements. Informal Requirements. The Presidency. Secession and Impeachment. NOTES The Presidency

Update ,000 Missing Jobs: Wisconsin s Lagging Sectors

HART RESEARCH ASSOCIATES Study # page 1

FISCAL POLICY INSTITUTE

Stan Greenberg and James Carville, Democracy Corps Erica Seifert and Scott Tiell, Greenberg Quinlan Rosner

SSUSH17 The student will analyze the causes and consequences of the Great Depression.

SSUSH18A thru E A New President and A New Deal

PRO/CON: Is media coverage of the NFL's problems fair or foul?

6 Question Types for IELTS Writing Task 2

I am honored to join you here at the 30 th Anniversary. CLUW luncheon. I am proud to stand before you as a

PROPOSED SONOMA COUNTY IMMIGRATION SURVEY

Essential Question: In what ways did President Franklin Roosevelt s New Deal provide relief, recovery, and reform during the Great Depression?

Backgrounder. This report finds that immigrants have been hit somewhat harder by the current recession than have nativeborn

R E P ORT TO «LATE MAY EARLY JUNE 2009 SWING DISTRICT SURVEY OF LIKELY VOTERS» Pete Brodnitz BSG June 9, 2009

THE STATE OF WORKING FLORIDA

Narrative Flow of the Unit

Breakthrough Economic Message Results of major web survey on the economy. July 18, 2011

Testimony to the House Democratic Policy Committee HB1250 Natalie Sabadish Policy Analyst, Keystone Research Center July 30, 2014

Living in a Globalized World

Opinion: How to Make America Greater: More Immigration By Eduardo Porter, Economic Scene, New York Times, February 7, 2017

ALBERTA FEDERATION OF LABOUR

President Obama s Political Project

Absolute Monarchs: The Kings and Queens Who Ruled Europe

The French Revolution, Part One: A Timeline of the Revolution

FINAL RESULTS: National Voter Survey Total Sample Size: 2428, Margin of Error: ±2.0% Interview Dates: November 1-4, 2018

Should Americans have HOPE during the Great Depression?

9. Gangs, Fights and Prison

DESERTING WORKERS? BARRIERS TO WORK IN NEW MEXICO FEBRUARY 2019 POLICY + INSIGHTS

Minimum Wage Increases: The Left s Magic Boat Strategy for Higher Wages. Western Pallet Association Palm Springs, January 15, 2017

This Expansion Looks Familiar

MEMORANDUM. To: Each American Dream From: Frank Luntz Date: January 28, 2014 Re: Taxation and Income Inequality: Initial Survey Results OVERVIEW

What was the New Deal?

ENGLISH CAFÉ 156. to repeal to end a law; to stop a law from being a law * Alcohol used to be illegal in the United States but that law was repealed.

To Congress The cost is too high for Obamacare! The Patient Care will decrease If my policy is set into place this will happen.

Transcription:

PRO/CON: Should fast-food employees earn a living wage? By McClatchy-Tribune, adapted by Newsela staff on 12.06.13 Word Count 1,442 Supporters of Good Jobs Now, along with fast-food employees, rally in front of Taco Bell on 8 Mile and Dean in Warren, Mich., Wednesday, July 31, 2013, for better wages. Most employees make $7.40 an hour. Jessica J. Trevino/Detroit Free Press/MCT PRO: Better pay for fast-food workers will change how businesses are run WASHINGTON Last November, fast-food workers began demanding higher wages and the right to join a union. By the end of August, the movement had spread to 60 cities nationwide. The inspiring movement is led by some of the nation's most underpaid employees, and should be supported by everyone who believes in fairness. First, let's do away with some of the nonsense that people have been told about these workers: they are not mostly teenagers. The majority are at least 23 and only 30 percent are teenagers. More than a quarter of them are raising at least one child. This article is available at 5 reading levels at https://newsela.com. 1

Rules Of The Game Changed How are they supposed to survive on about $9 an hour, which is the average wage? Many are only making the current federal minimum (https://www.newsela.com/?tag=minimum +wage) of just $7.25 per hour. Obviously, they are not just there for a little while before advancing to higher-paying jobs with benefits. Our terrible economy is not producing enough decent jobs to which they could move. In fact, nearly half of employed college graduates say that their jobs do not require a college degree. Fast-food workers are suffering for the same reasons that the majority of employees have lost ground for decades: the rules of the economy have been rewritten against them. The richest 1 percent of Americans have doubled their share of America's total income from 1980 to 2011. They didn't double their slice of the pie because of changes in technology or because they had the most needed skills. They did it because the link between how much a person produces and how much he or she takes home has been broken. If the federal minimum wage had increased since 1968 the way it did in prior decades, it would be $17 per hour today. Not a meager $7.25. Repairing A Broken Link The broken link between productivity and wages is due to the fact that most workers have lost bargaining power. That is a result of intentional "reforms," including: Changes in labor law that have weakened unions; failure of the government to hold companies accountable to labor laws; International "trade" agreements that put workers but not professionals into serious competition with cheaper labor overseas; And many other policy changes that take money from the poor and give it to the rich. All these changes mean that American businesses depend more and more on people running up big bills on the credit cards, pouring money into the stock market, or buying big houses they can't afford. When those houses stopped selling, the Great Recession hit. The U.S. has made a weak recovery since mid-2009. Jobs are still hard to get and workers find themselves with even less bargaining power. A Call For Action The organization and united action of fast-food workers is another sign that this economic experiment of nearly 40 years has run its course. This kind of mass organizing around domestic economic issues has not been seen for a long time, perhaps since the Great Depression. This article is available at 5 reading levels at https://newsela.com. 2

President Obama supports a higher minimum-wage. Unfortunately, he didn't deliver on his campaign promise to push for the Employee Free Choice Act. The act would have gone a long way to restore workers' rights to form unions and ask for higher pay. Obama and his allies were just defeated in their efforts to drag the country into another military conflict, because Americans showed the Congress that they were sick and tired of senseless wars, and those who voted for another one would be held accountable. Maybe we should make these politicians understand that we are also sick and tired of an economy that delivers the goods to fewer and richer people each year, and leaves tens of millions of people struggling to get by. Then we might begin to reverse some of the wrongs here at home, too. ABOUT THE WRITER Mark Weisbrot is the co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research. This essay is available to McClatchy-Tribune News Service subscribers. McClatchy-Tribune did not subsidize the writing of this column; the opinions are those of the writer and do not necessarily represent the views of McClatchy-Tribune or Newsela. This op-ed was adapted by Newsela. CON: Better pay for fast-food workers will do more harm than good WASHINGTON Medieval doctors treated their patients with blood-sucking leeches. Far from improving their condition, it left them worse off. Raising the wages of fast-food workers to $15 an hour would produce similar results for those the proposal is intended to help. In America, minimum-wage workers are better paid than the average worker in Mexico. Why? It's not because U.S. employers are more generous than their Mexican counterparts. Nor do Americans somehow deserve better pay. American minimum-wage earners make more because they produce more. Better education and better-funded companies allow American workers to be more productive, raising their earnings. Competition forces businesses to pay workers according to their productivity. If companies pay less, their employees will jump ship to competitors. And if they pay workers more than they produce, they go out of business. More Pay Equals Less Jobs For better or worse, fast-food jobs are relatively low-productivity positions, typically filled by inexperienced workers. Most fast-food customers want a quick, inexpensive meal. They will not regularly pay premium prices for a burger and fries. This article is available at 5 reading levels at https://newsela.com. 3

Doubling McDonalds' wages would raise its total costs by 25 percent, meaning the company would not make any profits on its sales. But raising prices would drive customers away. If Congress forced fast-food restaurants to pay $15 an hour, they would have to get a lot more productive to justify those higher costs. That would mean replacing current workers with machines and hiring fewer, more skilled workers to maintain them. Restaurants could do this in a variety of ways, such as using ipad stations instead of cashiers to take orders, or installing the new robotic burger flipper that makes up to 400 hamburgers an hour. At current wages these costly, high-tech improvements make sense for only a few restaurants; if wages doubled they would become widespread. The end result: far fewer jobs in the fast-food industry and higher pay for those who remain. Don't Super-Size Wages Those who consider such a trade-off worthwhile miss the economic role of minimum-wage jobs. For most workers, they are entry-level positions where they can gain experience that makes them more productive and helps them command higher pay in their next job. Businesses value skills like reliability, discipline and the ability to accept instructions. Fastfood jobs instill these basic skills in inexperienced workers. Most Americans started out in a job paying within a dollar of the minimum wage. Few stay there long. The average fast-food employee stays at his or her restaurant for less than a year. These are simply gateway jobs, the first step on a career ladder. That is why the vast majority of fast-food workers are under the age of 25. Super-sizing fast-food wages would eliminate many of these entry-level positions, making it harder for young people to land that all-important first job and start climbing the ladder of success. Most lawmakers and leaders recognize this. Not even the most liberal state has a minimum wage anywhere near $15 an hour. An Economy Torched By Higher Pay American Samoa is an example of would happen if the supporters of the "living wage" movement prevail. The island territory used to have a separate minimum wage because of its lower incomes. However, in 2007 Congress applied the U.S. minimum wage to Samoa. For the tiny Pacific Ocean nation this was the economic equivalent of $20 an hour. It did not boost purchasing power, increase the demand for goods and services or improve the way people live. Instead, unemployment septupled to more than 35 percent. This article is available at 5 reading levels at https://newsela.com. 4

The Samoan economy collapsed. The islands' governor begged Congress to suspend the wage hikes, pleading: "Our job market is being torched. Our businesses are being depressed. Our hope for growth has been driven away. How much does our government expect us to suffer?" Economics are not like laws that can be repealed, no matter how good intentions are. Requiring dramatically higher fast-food wages would eliminate hundreds of thousands of entry-level jobs. This would no more help fast-food workers than bleeding them with leeches. ABOUT THE WRITER James Sherk is a senior policy analyst in labor economics at The Heritage Foundation. This essay is available to McClatchy- Tribune News Service subscribers. McClatchy-Tribune did not subsidize the writing of this column; the opinions are those of the writer and do not necessarily represent the views of McClatchy-Tribune or Newsela. This op-ed was adapted by Newsela. This article is available at 5 reading levels at https://newsela.com. 5