Not sure if politics or social woes....
Apparently there was an editorial in the Wall Street Journal where the Vice President of some company was putting forth the idea of a $5/hour minimum wage. Evidently, this was one of the ideas put forth by the Heritage Foundation (or whatever group was talking about Republican planks). Anyway, the WSJ editorial person said that it would create more jobs, blah blah blah. Then he started doing math which evidently is not his strong suit.
Okay, current minimum wage is $7.25/hour, someone wants to bump that up to $10.00. This guy said that would mean the dollar menu at McDonalds would become the Three Dollar Menu. I guess he assumes that one worker at McDonalds only makes 1 burger per hour or something because that entire $2 would go into the cost of the burger. Now increasing the wage to $10 would mean a 38% jump. Assuming that cost goes into the burger, it would mean the dollar menu would become the $1.38 menu or some such. But we know that labor costs are fraction of the overall cost of a product, so the the cost increase would not be that much. So we get a case of fuzzy math on his part.
Next thing he says is that the poor people could live together and share costs. Even then, if you have 3 or 4 people making this minimum wage and they all work full time, we are talking about $10,000/year (roughly) meaning a combined income of $40,000 (if 4 are living together). In some cities, that can be tough for 1 person, let alone 4.
But all of this begs a simpler question: How come the wages of the workers have an impact on things but the people making millions don't?
And it begs another question: How can someone that math illiterate rise to the ranks of a company?
Apparently there was an editorial in the Wall Street Journal where the Vice President of some company was putting forth the idea of a $5/hour minimum wage. Evidently, this was one of the ideas put forth by the Heritage Foundation (or whatever group was talking about Republican planks). Anyway, the WSJ editorial person said that it would create more jobs, blah blah blah. Then he started doing math which evidently is not his strong suit.
Okay, current minimum wage is $7.25/hour, someone wants to bump that up to $10.00. This guy said that would mean the dollar menu at McDonalds would become the Three Dollar Menu. I guess he assumes that one worker at McDonalds only makes 1 burger per hour or something because that entire $2 would go into the cost of the burger. Now increasing the wage to $10 would mean a 38% jump. Assuming that cost goes into the burger, it would mean the dollar menu would become the $1.38 menu or some such. But we know that labor costs are fraction of the overall cost of a product, so the the cost increase would not be that much. So we get a case of fuzzy math on his part.
Next thing he says is that the poor people could live together and share costs. Even then, if you have 3 or 4 people making this minimum wage and they all work full time, we are talking about $10,000/year (roughly) meaning a combined income of $40,000 (if 4 are living together). In some cities, that can be tough for 1 person, let alone 4.
But all of this begs a simpler question: How come the wages of the workers have an impact on things but the people making millions don't?
And it begs another question: How can someone that math illiterate rise to the ranks of a company?
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