Good Intentions 2of3 Minimum Wage, Licensing, and Labor Laws with Walter Williams
Walter Williams’ PBS documentary Good Intentions based on his book, The State Against Blacks (1982). The documentary was very controversial at the time it was released and led to many animosities and even threats of murder. In Good Intentions, Dr. Williams examines the failure of the war on poverty and the devastating effect of well meaning government policies on blacks asserting that the state harms people in the US more than it helps them. He shows how government anti-poverty programs have often locked people into poverty making the points that: – being forced to attend 3rd rate public schools leave students unprepared for working life – minimum wages prevent young people from obtaining jobs at an early age – licensing and labor laws have had the effect of restricting entrance of blacks into the skilled trades and unions – the welfare system creates perverse incentives for the poor to make bad choices they otherwise would not Dr. Williams presents the following solutions to these problems: Failing Public Schools – Give parents greater control over their children’s education by setting up a tuition tax credit or voucher system to broaden competition in turn revitalizing both public and non-public schools Minimum Wages – Remove the minimum wage from youngsters to give more young people the chance to learn the world of work at an early age instead spending their free time idle an possibly falling into the habits of the street Restrictive Labor Laws, Jobs Programs …
This entry was posted by admin on April 13, 2010 at 6:21 am, and is filed under Meditation. Follow any responses to this post through RSS 2.0.Both comments and pings are currently closed.
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#2 written by MrNoonpig 2 years ago
Have you asked yourself:
Why are they working for less than the minimum wage?
Because the alternatives are even less, so they choose to work for less (than you do).
It’s not some big ‘owners of the means of production’ conspiracy its a fact of life. Neither is it exploitation. You have to work in order to stay alive. -
#3 written by MrNoonpig 2 years ago
No!
Wages are set mainly through supply & demand. Companies don’t have the right to pay people whatever they want because if they set their wage too low nobody would want to take the job and the company would go bust. AND nobody would work for free (be a slave) unless they were coerced because it simply wouldn’t benefit them.However, there are people who work for free (apprentices, people gaining experience) because they choose to work for free so that they can gain the necessary experience.
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#5 written by briano8713 2 years ago
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#7 written by Thisisnotmyrealname8 2 years ago
I know you think you’re clever, but you are only pointing out that you lack understanding.
Your question is ridiculous. Do you think that without minimum wage a company would be able to pay someone zero? But you aren’t implying that they can force people to work (which is what slavery is) so your question is ignorant. It is only meant as a trap. And you’re not clever for it. Your baloney question doesn’t apply to the real world.
Socialism is slavery.
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#8 written by briano8713 2 years ago
I am my own worst enemy? = uhoh
Black labor markets (sweatshops) are an unfortunate side effect of prohibitions (min wage). If you agree its exploitation, why not bring these workers into legitimate enterprises (albeit at lower than min. wage)?
I agree, people not being able to afford the basic necessities is a problem ethically/socially minded people must face some responsibility.
Rather than fucking with the labor market, why not set up a negative income tax or something like it?
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#9 written by nfwvideo 2 years ago
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#10 written by Thisisnotmyrealname8 2 years ago
Though, if the principle is stuck with then you could theorize that poverty would be fought against. I am already on that principle. You need to latch onto that principle, too.
Envy will not bring peace in the end. There are two things at play in Socialism (which is what you’re about, isn’t it?). They are Envy and Desire For Power. Two classes of people, and only perpetually two. The irony is that it is what Socialists ignorantly claim Capitalism is. But a glance will prove it is not true.
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#11 written by Thisisnotmyrealname8 2 years ago
@nfwvideo The Constitution precedes the Free Market in principle. Therefore, slavery is not a market issue, but a right’s issue. Got it?
And lower than “minimum wage” for young kids, or young adults, even grown persons is not putting them to slave work. The point is about paying wages according to what the job is worth. It is about getting people in a position of responsibility that will keep them off the streets. It is not necessarily about ending poverty.
A principle is at play.
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#12 written by nfwvideo 2 years ago
absolutily its exploiation no arguements there basically a sweat shop
its not about 50 dollars an hr its about a bare minimum to live off of
when u tell someone that they arent even worth the bare minimum in pay im sure you well get a top notch quality employee
anything under minimum wage is selling people IMO
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#15 written by Thisisnotmyrealname8 2 years ago
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#16 written by briano8713 2 years ago
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#17 written by briano8713 2 years ago
I’d love to hear why you think 7/ hour is ok, yet 5/hour is tantamount to “selling people.”
Would you have any problems mandating 10/hour, how bout 50?
FYI: MILLIONS, if not tens of millions, currently work in this country for less than min. wage. Because of the mandate (among other restrictions), they are subject to lower wages and FAR worse conditions than they would otherwise get in a legitimate enterprise. I consider this exploitation, how bout you?
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#18 written by nfwvideo 2 years ago
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#19 written by briano8713 2 years ago
@nfwvideo Its not that many blacks aren’t qualified for positions, many are. The point is a minimum wage creates a greater applicant pool (7 dollars is great if you only are worth 5) for fewer jobs. This is a non-market-clearing surplus of labor, aka unemployment.
This hurts many unskilled workers (not just blacks) whose “equilibrium” market value is slightly below the minimum wage.
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#20 written by voodooshizzle 2 years ago
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#21 written by pobaldy66 2 years ago
too many other contributing factors (increased female heads of house, increased-desegregated mobility, drug culture, recession/backlash on desegregation) during this period, which upon review may show that they too result from gov’t intervention, to take the position that some of these horrible numbers might not have been WORSE without gov’t intervention.
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#22 written by nfwvideo 2 years ago
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#24 written by Nintendomanwill 2 years ago
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#25 written by prayfertrey 2 years ago
Agreed. I think this will happen with the first unschooled generation. Human history has a “doh” quality to it. Science was slowed down to a halt for a thousand years because Aristotle’s idea was more popular than that of the atomists. Isn’t that neat!? And America became the most advanced nation the world had ever seen in just a couple of hundred years, then the industrial revolution slowed everything down to a halt, so that we have ever faster chips and ever more primitive culture…
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