February 11, 2007

Raise The Minimum Wage, Eliminate Jobs

It is, after all, a basic question of supply and demand. Make a commodity more expensive, and less will be purchased. And labor IS a commodity.

Look at what is happening in Arizona.

Oh, for the days when Arizona's high school students could roll pizza dough, sweep up sticky floors in theaters or scoop ice cream without worrying about ballot initiatives affecting their earning power.

That's certainly not the case under the state's new minimum-wage law that went into effect last month.

Some Valley employers, especially those in the food industry, say payroll budgets have risen so much that they're cutting hours, instituting hiring freezes and laying off employees.

And teens are among the first workers to go.

Companies maintain the new wage was raised to $6.75 per hour from $5.15 per hour to help the breadwinners in working-poor families. Teens typically have other means of support.

Mark Messner, owner of Pepi's Pizza in south Phoenix, estimates he has employed more than 2,000 high school students since 1990. But he plans to lay off three teenage workers and decrease hours worked by others. Of his 25-person workforce, roughly 75 percent are in high school.

"I've had to go to some of my kids and say, 'Look, my payroll just increased 13 percent,' " he said. " 'Sorry, I don't have any hours for you.' "

So tell me -- how have these workers been helped by the pay raise passed by Arizona voters? How will American workers nationwide be helped by a minimum wage increase that brings about the elimination of their jobs?

Posted by: Greg at 04:25 PM | No Comments | Add Comment
Post contains 275 words, total size 2 kb.

Comments are disabled. Post is locked.
5kb generated in CPU 0.0285, elapsed 0.033 seconds.
19 queries taking 0.0218 seconds, 28 records returned.
Powered by Minx 1.1.6c-pink.
[/posts]