Instigator / Pro
4
1417
rating
158
debates
32.59%
won
Topic
#2535

On Balance Minimum Wage Should be Raised to at least 15$/Hour in US

Status
Finished

The debate is finished. The distribution of the voting points and the winner are presented below.

Winner & statistics
Better arguments
0
3
Better sources
2
2
Better legibility
1
1
Better conduct
1
1

After 1 vote and with 3 points ahead, the winner is...

Surgeon
Parameters
Publication date
Last updated date
Type
Standard
Number of rounds
4
Time for argument
Three days
Max argument characters
10,000
Voting period
One month
Point system
Multiple criterions
Voting system
Open
Contender / Con
7
1513
rating
1
debates
100.0%
won
Description

Warning to new users: My argument is as well researched as my strongest articles.

-->
@Surgeon

DM is direct messaging, i.e. the private messages feature on this site. Appreciate the responses, still have some disagreements, but thinking we should take this there if you're interested in continuing.

-->
@whiteflame

PART 2

Purchasing power and wages are quite different things. I think you are a little confused here. I might get paid 5 dollars per hour. But if I am paid in Silver Dollars rather than through electronic credit my purchasing power is significantly higher. Equally if I am in a high inflationary environment, whatever I get paid, my purchasing power is rapidly lost. The biggest reduction in purchasing power is not the wage point, but the "real" wage point. The remorseless moves of all Governments to replace real currency (with intrinsic value), with fiat currency has destroyed purchasing power. They do this to pay for the same large programmes being advocated for, knowing that the people have to accept it given they are monopoly suppliers of currency (and ultimately taxes must be paid in the same denomination). But this is of course only a giant Ponzi scheme which is ultimately inflationary (the other major destroyer of purchasing power).

The only specific outcome I have in mind is the optimal position, so I am not sure what you mean. There are specific aims of other policies advocated (eg minimum wage), but as I have pointed out, these must come at the cost of others, where the overall position is sub-optimal.

There are asymmetries of power in the Market, that is true. But that is the case in every single human interaction. As stated earlier, the best protection is competition in the Market (by removing intervention not adding to it).

I do not have to assume a boom not any pattern of money distribution. Conventional economic thinking is that booms are great and busts are bad. That is true for the drug addict as well! In my tradition we consider booms as bad (the root cause) and busts as the necessary correction (but not good to experience). Money is a medium of exchange and therefore exchanged, not distributed. When we zoom out to look at distributions what we actually see is how many and/or how much success a person (or group) have had trading (exchanging) in the market. And like all spontaneous orders (Markets are a spontaneous and not a planned order), it follows Pareto's law.

-->
@whiteflame

PART 1. Sorry what do you mean DM?

Yes I think we agree on evolution. Just to build on your point: "whether species changes are the result of an accumulation of many traits or a specific few". It is of course both (not either/or). The deciding factor is do these changes impact on co-reproduction, in what are basically the same animal. If they do then speciation is the possible outcome. BUT whether few or many, these changes must occur through micro-evolution (or evolutionary theory is false). We do not see a Macro level, speciation events in one generation, eg a land based dinosaur developing functional flying ability (or whatever Macro effect we want to point to).

I understand the point on non-action. I just think it is flat out wrong. You could see being bald as a hairstyle using this approach to logic. Non-action is non-action. A=A. However, I think the point you want to make is "given our current situation" the removal of intervention policies and a return to the separation of the state and the economy (a position we largely saw before WWI in the West), amounts to an action and thus has unintended consequences. For me that is trivially true, because I am arguing differently ie "given a clean starting position" the best outcome is for non-intervention. BUT, I would also say that the act of returning the economy to non-intervention, will set about powerful processes that will return us to long term prosperity and health. There is little doubt that in the short term we will see significant economic hardship in some sectors, unemployment, and price instability. It is the cost of taking the patient through a withdrawl programme. The drugs they were used too, satisfied a physiological response which caused them short term pleasure at the cost of long term poor health and distress in their family. To remove that long term risk and restore everyones health, they will have significant short term pain. But because of the short term impact, would we NOT therefore advocate that withdrawl programmes are a good thing? And so it is with the economy. The maximising point is the maximising point, no other points on the graph optimise the total solution for everyone better. As Margaret Thatcher once said "you cannot buck the Market".

My argument absolutely does not assume that the market based approach naturally raises the cost of labour (wages). It is far more subtle but hard to explain. As you point out it will for some and not for others. I would contend that there will be a general trend over the long term in that direction, but not in all long term cases and not in the short or even medium terms. We should see the labour markets as approximate to a fractal pattern based on the structure of production and services. The clearing price of each of the various labour markets is the optimal point. Nobody is forced to work in a free market. The best protection labour get is not through legislation or unions (both of which hurt labour depending on their strength), but through competitive forces of the market. If labour is in demand because value is being efficiently extracted, the economy grows, then wages will also reflect that. The clearing price of each dynamic market (is the point were labour and capital settle there conflicting demands), reflects this fully. If someone in the Market can only command 5/hr, then that is all they can command. It is not the responsibility of government to force a broad swathe of the tax base to pay supplementary taxes to either 1) support a minimum wage policy 2) nor for them dis-incentivise work by having a benefits floor which pays more than work. These policies lead to widespread unintended consequences and movements away from the stable equilibrium reached in all other markets. The ripples are felt across the whole economy (Bastiat's point). So what sounds good and caring, ends up being anything but.

-->
@Surgeon

Not going to cover everything, mainly because I don't want this to turn into a full debate here in the comments. We can transition to DMs if you're interested.

I generally agree with you regarding evolution, though I guess we see the terms differently in some regards. I have found that creationists tend to argue that they're entirely separate, which never made any sense to me. I find evolutionary theory to be sound, though whether species changes are the result of an accumulation of many traits or a specific few is a separate story. That's a separate issue, and I'm not going to throw in my two cents on that because that's a whole other debate and I think we're mostly on the same page here anyway.

I guess I need to rephrase my point from earlier, though I disagree with the idea that non-action is entirely distinct from action. Instead, I'll put it this way: any shift in economic policy can have unintended consequences. If that shift is towards more or different regulation, or towards less regulation, people still adapt to the changes in ways that we cannot necessarily anticipate. I suppose you can argue that, by taking away regulation, you remove the ability of governments to intervene and cause their own unintended economic consequences. On that, we can agree. The problem, however, is that taking away those regulations also frees up individuals to take more actions that could be harmful. I don't think that automatically balances in favor of deregulation. I can see how inflexibility can create some problems, but I disagree that having as much flexibility as possible is always better.

I think your argument largely assumes that markets will raise wages without setting a minimum wage, which may be true for some, but the very fact that so many workers have their wages set at the minimum suggests that their wages would fall if that minimum was removed. For that subset, being effectively forced to, say, work for $5 an hour puts them in an absolutely untenable situation where they are not earning enough to sustain themselves.

It strikes me that that can also be bad for the economy at large, reducing the purchasing power of a large subset of the labor market to the point that they can't afford basics that otherwise have a consistently large and booming market. I'm not saying that any circumstance is necessarily better on the whole, but it strikes me that your reasoning is based in favoring a specific general outcome for the market that ignores how power dynamics in the labor market, especially among those without significant training or education, are likely to play out. You would have to assume both a boom in the market and a dissemination of the resulting wealth through wages to get to your view of how things would work out.

-->
@whiteflame

PART 2

All markets reach an equilibrium (whether intervened in or not). That is not the question you should be asking. The questions are: 1) how stable (in the short term) is that equilibrium?; and 2) how free to adjust (in the medium to longer term) is that equilibrium? In a minimum wage controlled labour market the clearing price of wage labour is not free to adjust. It has no medium or long term flexibility, and if set too high has no short term stability. And because clearing prices of the market are over-riden by such a policy, a sub optimal result must axiomatically follow.

The same applies to the money markets (as to the labour markets). The interest rate policy (set by central authorities) will, if done badly (normally forcing too low a set of interest rates for too long), create distorted capital structures in the whole economy (including bubbles), and an unstable equilibrium is reached beyond the possible economic frontier (of production & investment). Eventually this equilibrium will break (is unsustainable) because it is beyond the frontier (simply put the money is not there), and the economy snaps back like a rubber band to below its frontier (which is why we see depressions and credit crunches). Because its the capital structure that is distorted, it is also the capital that gets devalued to take up the slack (shares, deposits, house prices or whatever). Thus any serious deviation from the money market clearing price (loanable funds market) for any significant time, is sub-optimal for the whole economy (even though a section of society may temporarily benefit).

It may seem contradictory to both have stability and freedom to adjust, but this is essential since market prices co-ordinate supply and demand through TIME. Hence stability is reached only in the short run, but adjustments are essential in the medium to longer run as the balance of savings, investment, consumption and production alter.

I did not say economic research should be abandoned. It is useful in the say way as Macro effects of evolution are informative. But it is not decisive in determining policy that impacts on Micro-Economics. Again to mention my tradition of Economics, we make no distinction between Micro and Macro Economics. There is just economics. All economics (human action) is at bottom Micro, although we can only really see the effects at the Macro level.

-->
@whiteflame

PART 1.

Thank you for your comments. We will have to watch this doesn't turn into its own mini debate.

Firstly Evolution. I apologise if I gave you the impression otherwise, but evolutionary theory is sound and for it to be sound all evolution must only occur at the Micro level, and what we euphemistically refer to is "Macro-Evolution" is in effect the accumulation of thousands of micro events leading to a speciation event (the classic example of this is ring speciation).

I did not say we do not see the effects of evolution on a Macro scale. We do. Evolutionary theory is about as well attested as anything in science can be. Evolution is a continuous process. I said in reality all evolution (ie the process) is on a Micro-scale and therefore the conjunction of the words "Macro" and "Evolution" is not really a thing, but a contradiction in terms. It implies there are evolutionary processes at the level of species to species transition, which is simply false (it only happens within a species). BUT if it continues unabated: a speciation event will occur (usually demarcated by reproductive difficulties between one new species and the old), even though they are still effectively the same animal or plant. And if these divergences continue the Macro effects are magnified. Whales and Cows can no longer co-reproduce, even though they share a common ancestor.

This is the same mistake creationists make when asking "have you ever seen a cat give birth to a dog?" (or something similar). They are literalising the term "Macro-Evolution" (which it is not clear to me if you are doing it or not), as an instant magical speciation event (which to be fair to them is what the term implies). But they are fundamentally mistaken. There is only evolution (not Micro and Macro). It is a hugely complex process of waste, trial and error. It is motored by continual natural micro-evolutionary processes, from which we occasionally zoom out to see the accumulated picture (at the Macro level). But we cannot control evolution by controlling Macro variables. The same analogy applies in economics.

A non-action is not an action. This is rather a rhetorical ploy. A=A. There can be no unintended economic consequences through non-action (non-intervention), since all economic actions that follow are made intentionally by free individuals voluntarily (as long as we apply the rule of law), whether they are good or bad for the individual could be described as unintended personal consequences, but that is an inevitable in any field of human action like for example "crossing the road". It is thus not in the scope of what we are talking about.

I agree with your axiomatic reasoning approach. This is exactly the approach I would advocate. And it follows axiomatically that interference in market clearing prices, must lead to sub-optimal outcomes. There is no other point on the graph where outcomes are optimised other than at the prevailing market clearing price.

-->
@Surgeon

Appreciate the response, though it appears we have some solid differences on both this and the topic of macro-evolution (I disagree that it functionally doesn't exist), though for separate reasons. I agree that trying to pin down economic behavior across a broad set of people is ridiculously difficult if not impossible, though there are some rules of thumb we can follow that are generally true enough that they're practically axiomatic, e.g. poorer people tend to spend more of what they earn than richer people. However, I don't think that should result in us throwing out economic research, but rather engaging with social and economic in combination and focusing on how people are likely to behave given a set of economic circumstances. It's not 100% and, while I generally agree that it leads to a lot of biased source claims by each side, I do think there are valid take-aways for each that are largely unquestioned. You pointed some of those out yourself.

I guess the main problem I have with this, though, is that you're essentially arguing that a free market system is better because tinkering tends to cause problems of its own. I'd say that refusing to take action is, effectively, an action itself. It comes with its own set of consequences, side-effects of standing back and letting things play out without intervention. Essentially, unintended consequences happen whether we choose to intervene or not. There is always a cost, regardless of whether there is action or inaction. Just because a free market system could reach a "free natural equilibrium" doesn't mean that it will, nor that even if it does, it will not cause a great deal of harm on the way or even set an equilibrium that is inherently damaging to a majority of the people it affects. A stable outcome isn't necessarily a good one. Moreover, I don't think that the reality that many interventions have better studied consequences than the free market system makes the free market system the better system to use, and I say that while simultaneously agreeing that a free market system is better for a great deal of national and international trade. I also say all this knowing that you probably have a much better grasp on economics than I do (and a much clearer way of explaining it), so I admit that my understanding may come from a flawed and uninformed perspective.

-->
@whiteflame

We should not forget at root economics is a dismal discipline, as it is in effect the study of shortages. We can build no Utopia out of it. And even if we could, it would most likely be a truly depressing place to live in. In my tradition of economic thought, we see the economy as a complex and chaotic system, rather than a science/engineering discipline (ie it is NOT a big machine with input>process>output). Instead like the weather it is unknowable, unpredictable and inscrutable, and can only really be studied through a branch of logic and not of science (in particular the logic of human action).

Whilst there is some value in understanding aggregates (macro-economics), one cannot fool oneself into then tinkering with those aggregates, and knowing with cast-iron certainty what the impact is (like the minimum wage). This was the mistake of Keynesianism and of Socialism. Economic information is not held on a spreadsheet, but is held by all of us in real time, with changing demands and changing minds (micro-economics).

To use an analogy. It is a bit like trying to study Evolutionary Biology only through macro-evolution. There is (in reality) no macro-evolution, only micro-evolution. Over time and geography one can see the effects of micro-evolution through macro effects (and study them in retrospect as a guide to one potential future). But one cannot see the micro effects through macro-evolution (in real time ).

Similarly nobody can anticipate the minds of everyone, every second of every day, especially when the economic environment is constantly changing around them. This is why central planning is a fatal conceit, and why the research in fields like the minimum wage is so flawed. The research explicitly targets group X (benefitting), or group Y (disbenefitting) and only at point in time Z. Researchers have to do this to limit the near infinite variables, but as such it only reflects the policy aspirations of the researchers, not the truth.

To me tinkering about with legislation on the back of research like this, in macro-economics, is dangerous nonsense. Policy instruments have untold, unseen and unintended consequences, which is ALWAYS at a cost (which is never calculated, but always borne by some unidentified people in the long term). This is not to say free-market Capitalism in and of itself solves all problems (it doesn't). But it is to say it is better than any of the alternatives, because it allows for the free natural equilibriums to emerge and stabilize. Governments, Policy Wonks, QUANGOs, Central Banks, Universities, Scholars (wanting to make a name for themselves), Economists et al all have press offices. But the free-market has no press office. Which is why it gets blamed for things like "market failures" and depressions, when in reality the seed was sown by the very groups mentioned now looking for an excuse to hide the mess created by their tinkering.

Milton Friedman had a great take on this. He read every report (during his working lifetime) by the US Treasury. He could sum every report up into 2 types. In the good years, the US Treasury claimed that because of its good governance, "x" happened. In the bad years the US Treasury claimed that despite their judicious efforts, "y" happened and blew them off-course. This might be true for Wars and Crises, but every year? One has to wonder.

-->
@Surgeon

Looking back on it, I think I was a bit harsh in my RFD, but I'm glad you appreciated it. Honestly, you have a very solidly articulated argument. I've been trying to up my voting a bit in recent weeks (largely due to requests), and I'm glad I have, as it's given me an opportunity to see some excellently constructed arguments from new debaters. I'd count you among those. I think Seldiora started off strong in this debate, but tapered off as it went along. Meanwhile, I think your arguments, and particularly your rebuttals, evolved quite expertly as the debate went on. I look forward to seeing further debates from you.

-->
@whiteflame

Thank you for your feedback and taking the time to offer your insights.

-->
@seldiora
@Surgeon

Pt. 1

Rather than go through each point in this debate, I'm going to focus on a few key things that I think matter to the debate as a whole, and make my decision based on them. I'll try to do this in the context of providing feedback, so yes, I'm frontloading criticism.

I think Con has a really strong argument from the outset that pervades throughout... but I'm not sure that he has a counterplan, and I should be sure. He says multiple times that it would be better if we had an entirely free market system without any minimum wage. You can absolutely advocate for that, but you should make clear from the start that it is your advocacy. I kept reading your first round thinking about how your argument is mostly non-unique because it applies both to the present system where a lower minimum wage exists and Pro's advocacy, and honestly, I would have bought that your efforts to claim this pretty vague counterplan later in the debate would have been abusive. That's not to say you have no points without it, but if you're going to take the stance that this is your advocacy, clarify that immediately. Even by the final round, I'm still unsure. Moreover, if you are going to advocate for that, then the burden of proof in this debate is shared. You can't just knock down your opponent's argument and get by, as you claimed later in the debate. Finally, while I understand your concerns about individual studies and their effectiveness to tell the story, making sweeping claims about what imposing a minimum wage does in terms of big patterns based solely on a book I cannot access just leaves me questioning why I should buy your sources over those of your opponent when you keep telling me we're waist deep in literature on the subject for both sides. If you want to elevate your source, do that, but do it up front instead of leaving me scratching my head about why you'd undercut your own source that I can't access or validate.

As for Pro, I can see where you were going with your argument, but if the words "wage slavery" and/or "exploitation of labor" aren't appearing in your argument, then something is desperately wrong. You're practically gifting Con much of his argumentation when it comes to choice and negotiation rather than confronting him with the reality that the employer and the employee are, very often if not always, not playing on an equal playing field. That's particularly true of minimum wage workers who, as your opponent helpfully pointed out, often lack basic experience that would allow them to better negotiate their wages and working circumstances. In general, you're letting him control the conversation when it comes to how companies behave and what is in their best interests, which is a big mistake on your part. You're also letting him get away with a lot of sweeping statements regarding how economies and individual businesses address the imposition of new costs on them. There are reasons why a company might want to maintain a certain number of workers on their payroll, why slashing dividends for investors is likely to backfire in a big way, and why raising costs can also cause a great deal of harm to a business's bottom line. Con kept talking about these actions as though they were virtually inevitable. You have to counter that. You have points in this debate that could have been used to challenge this, particularly when you talk about individuals having more money to spend on businesses, but you need to wield them. You can't just say them once and then leave them behind.

-->
@seldiora
@Surgeon

Pt. 2

With all this being said, it's a relatively clear decision for Con. He controls almost the entire flow of the debate throughout each round, hyping up an argument that he largely bases in huge claims about how things would work under a pure free market system that I'm having tremendous trouble verifying through the limited and often inaccessible sources he provides. Nonetheless, his logic is sound, and he goes through a great deal of effort to provide analogies to make his points for him. He also puts a lot of warrants down on his arguments, building a substantial case for why having a minimum wage and/or raising it does a great deal of collateral damage. While I'm unclear on the benefits of liberty beyond its links to the "free market solves most everything" impact, it stands largely unopposed. Pro's argument doesn't really challenge Con's case in a meaningful way. The need to get more money makes sense, but a) the collateral damage appears to outweigh, b) it's mitigated Con's argument that different places require different amounts of money to survive (which isn't an incredibly strong point, but gets no response) and c) it's turned by Con's argument that "rising tides raise all ships", i.e. that wages will go up as the economy rises (haven't seen evidence of this, but I don't see any rebuttals to it, either). The Market Benefits point could have been strong if it had been wielded better, but Con's Bastiat's tale point, despite being a bit of a head scratcher in terms of how well it links, pretty effectively takes it out anyway. That just leaves the depression argument, which has its support directly challenged and it's at least clear that people losing their jobs will also up the amount of depression, which leaves this either mitigated or turned and I can't really decide which. While I've got my issues with Con's impacts and determining what his case actually is, he's nonetheless clearly winning some points, and those points outweigh any potential impact from Pro. Hence the vote.

-->
@seldiora

I’ll try to get to this.

-->
@whiteflame
@MisterChris

three days left.

*bump*

-->
@seldiora

I'll try to leave a vote

-->
@MisterChris

well, since you wanted to take this, I suppose you know this topic well? Care to vote?

Tempting.... If there are no other takers, I may jump on this one.