thegreekdog wrote:Fair Pay
People deserve to be paid what they are worth on the market. Nothing more, nothing less. A doctor is worth more than a bagger at a supermarket. It may suck, but it is what it is. If there were no taxes, companies would still pay less for certain employees than for others. That being typed, I do agree with what you've said before - that some people are overcompensated.
Shortened edit:
Doctors, attorneys, etc ought to be paid more than stock clerks. I don't see that as unfair at all. The problem is when you have people working hard at their jobs, working fulltime and not getting enough for the basics of life in this country. Even when it comes to CEO pay, its not the huge paychecks, per se that bother me. It is HOW they get those paychecks. Too often, the way to get wealth in this country is by cutting corners that hurt ALL of us.
This is absolutely true in the case of pollution. I realize it is no longer "the thing" to talk about effects of DDT and lead, but we actually got off relatively easy with them, "easy", though no gas company, no paint company, no one is really being held accountable for the medical care, the lost wages, etc from kids being exposed to lead.
thegreekdog wrote:That being typed, I do not think anyone deserves to be paid to have a decent house. The other stuff (food, clothing, transportation, medical care) I do agree with. While there are many people who do not make enough to afford these things, charities do help with this (as does free college educations, job training, etc.). To the extent people cannot afford these things, the government does help... and we all know that companies and individuals pay taxes.
I really cannot believe you, consumate Liberaterian that you say you are, is giving companies such a huge "pass" here. What you are saying is that companies can pay people low and make more profit because we taxpayers and some various charities are willing to step forward. REALLY?
Sorry, but I believe that is plain wrong. Profit is only profit AFTER you pay your suppliers and employees. The market can never be the judge of what is appropriate at the bottom end of wages, because there will ALWAYS be someone hard enough up to take whatever wages an employer offers. "The market" is OK with having kids weaving rugs in Bangledesh for meager rations. Granted, I am not suggesting US corporation are like that. Yet, setting aside the true idiots, look at how many employers are perfectly happy to hire illegal aliens or who simply justify it by saying that they "cannot afford" to do otherwise, or who are perfectly OK with cutting whatever other corners they can. AND, most of that does not happen to doctors and attorneys. The abuses happen more to fast food workers, laborers in non-union factories, stock clerks, etc. THEY have to put up with conditions most "executives" would be shocked about. I realize that housing prices are outrageous in some areas, but saying its OK for someone to pump gas for you, but then they have to live 100 miles away.. is just not right. Sorry, but its not.
(several people my dad spoke to in CA worked 2-3 jobs and faced 2 1/2 hour commutes .. that might be acceptable if you are an executive who wants to live in a fancy country estate, but when its someone simply trying to raise kids... we ALL suffer).
I understand that paying people more means the cost of goods go up. And sure, that was a very big reason why GM went under. However, let's look at the other side. Walmart gets to have cheap goods because it doesn't pay employees. We save when we buy products, but ultimately pay a lot more in taxes. Further, those employees don't have the disposable income that they should have and therefore are not able to buy more than most necessities. This doesn't hurt Walmart much, because that is precisely what they sell. Of course, that Walmart now undersells my small local market -- means that tax source for my town is soon going to leave, a major employer of kids and others who need the work is going away. Those wages were not much more than Walmart, but unlike Walmart, most of those people were not going to stay there. Kids who needed jobs to support themselves fully are trained and promoted in ways Walmart does not. My neighbor has been working for 15 years as a clerk.
When you add in the bit about shipping jobs overseas and plants overseas to avoid pollution limits, etc, then the question is whether ANYONE really and truly has the right to say a short term profit is really more important than the societal costs. Businesses too often are simply allowed to ignore those costs. Government's job is to control them.