Local San
Francisco Bookstore Dies of Minimum Wage Hikes, Posted
on February
4, 2015 by Michael Minkoff —
We’ve said it over
and over again. Minimum wage hikes will not do a thing to help anyone. They
result in either higher prices or layoffs, but they hurt small, local
businesses the most. It seems the first casualty confirming our fears has been
tallied in über-liberal San Francisco. Borderlands
Bookstore will be closing its doors, thanks to the minimum wage increase:
In November, San Francisco voters
overwhelmingly passed a measure that will increase the minimum wage within the
city to $15 per hour by 2018. Although all of us at Borderlands support the
concept of a living wage in principal and we believe that it’s possible that
the new law will be good for San Francisco — Borderlands Books as it exists is
not a financially viable business if subject to that minimum wage. Consequently
we will be closing our doors no later than March 31st.
There is so much wrong with this. For one, small businesses
often operate at a very narrow profit margin. Fluctuations in rent and
competitors’ prices can have a devastating effect on whether or not a small
business will stay open. They don’t need minimum wage hikes, on top of all the
other variables, making it impossible for them to stay in business. It should
be obvious that closing a
business, and thus having no
jobs available, would be worse than having jobs available with a slightly lower
wage.
And furthermore, there is no real indication that minimum
wage hikes actually help anyone. Businesses that stay in business after the
hikes generally survive by raising prices, shrinking services (or portions), or
laying off employees. If they raise prices, then the employee with a “higher”
wage just spends more to get the same things. Which results in no net gain.
Because it is all about buying power.
The money you receive in wages is only as good as what you can buy with it.
Which brings up the most important issue here: monetary
policy. If the civil government really cared about benefitting people who don’t
make much, they should just fix the dollar. The minimum wage in 1964 was $1.25.
But our money was still connected to silver until 1965. If you took the five circulated
silver quarters ($1.25) you had been paid in 1964, and you sold them today, each of them would be worth between $3.25 and $6.50, depending on their year. That’s between $16.25 and $32.50
an hour! Even at the bottom
end, that’s better than the minimum wage hike that just devastated Borderlands
bookstore.
So how about all these living wage, minimum wage hiking,
liberals start crying about our monetary policy and tell the civil government
to fix our currency. Now that’s
something I could get behind.
http://lastresistance.com/9938/local-san-francisco-bookstore-dies-minimum-wage-hikes/
No comments:
Post a Comment