While I understandably don’t like politicians, I rarely think they are stupid. They do lots of idiotic things, of course, but they are making calculated decisions that it’s okay to hurt the economy if they achieve some political benefit. That’s immoral, but not dumb.
However, sometimes politicians say things so absurdly inaccurate that it makes me wonder if they actually are…what’s the politically correct term?…cognitively challenged.
Consider, for instance, some of Donald Trump’s trade tweets, which were jaw-dropping examples of economic illiteracy.
And now Joe Biden is showing he can be similarly detached from the real world, claiming this past weekend that a $15-per-hour minimum wage is a good idea because, “all the economics show that if you do that the whole economy rises.”
Though maybe that’s true if one can somehow claim that “1 out of 40” is the same as “all.”
Moreover, it appears that “all” doesn’t include the Congressional Budget Office.
The bean counters at CBO don’t have a reputation for being fire-breathing libertarians, so it’s especially noteworthy that its new estimates show that a higher minimum wage will reduce economic output, destroy 1.4 million jobs, raise prices, and increase the burden of government spending.
As the old joke goes, “other than that, Mrs. Lincoln, what did you think of the play?”
And “all” doesn’t include America’s premier source for financial news. The Wall Street Journal opined on Biden’s plan this morning.
…his proposal for a $15 federal minimum wage…by 2025, according to the CBO’s new average estimate, would result in a loss of 1.4 million jobs.The idled workers would be disproportionately younger and less educated, and CBO projects that half of them
would drop out of the labor force. …The federal budget deficit through 2031 would increase $54 billion, CBO says, as the government spent more on unemployment benefits and health-care programs. …setting the minimum wage at a high of $15 would essentially put the country through an economic experiment. This would mean imposing the urban labor costs of San Francisco and Manhattan on every out-of-the-way gas station in rural America.
Of course, we’ve already experienced some real-world experiments.
Higher minimum wages already have wreaked havoc and destroyed jobs in places such as Seattle, New York City, Oakland, and Washington, DC, so we already have plenty of evidence (and don’t forget the European data as well).
I’ll close with this clever cartoon strip, which mocks people who support higher mandated wages for reasons of naivete rather than stupidity.
P.S. Here’s my most recent interview about the minimum wage, here’s the interview that got me most frustrated, and here’s my interview debate with Biden’s economic advisor.
P.P.S. I strongly recommend this video on the topic from the Center for Freedom and Prosperity.
[…] the years, I’ve shared many amusing memes and cartoons about minimum wage […]
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[…] the years, I’ve shared many amusing memes and cartoons about minimum wage […]
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I often hear the pro-minimum wage argument that businesses that have large profit margins don’t trickle down to benefit the employee (such as one of your earlier interviews when the business ‘leaves it on the balance sheet’). But that’s assuming such a mandate would benefit a large portion of the labor force that works for companies that actually have large balances sitting around. When you use giant corporate examples like Walmart, sure, you’d like to see that money end up in the pockets of employees. But the reality is that a majority of employers are small businesses, who aren’t sitting around with large profits at the end of every year. So when you impose wage mandates that are likely easy for large companies to meet (like we see already with Amazon), it ends up hurting the small businesses that can’t afford such wages or no longer have additional profits to invest in their own growth.
The other thing is, if folks want to see more money end up in the hands of the employee, lets talk about how employees are paying taxes on money that has already been taxed at the corporate level once, if not multiple, times.
[…] Biden, the Minimum Wage, and Political Fantasy […]
Reblogged this on Gds44's Blog.
Very poor article. To argue against tariffs when we confront a nation that employs slave labor is to willfully ignore realities and commit economic suicide.
Why have you not touched on the concept that a higher minimum wage will only increase labor costs all across the board? The employee who was making $15 and was a more valuable employee than the $10 now wants $20 or more. Eventually, it seems to me, that this would cause inflation and those dollars would not buy any more value. I’d love to hear your take on this and if you have addressed before I missed it.
Stu, I know your time is limited but I thought you might appreciate this presentation and video regarding Biden’s proposal to increase the minimum wage. Jim
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