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I think we're playing fast and loose with the word "harm" here. Technically, getting 19% profit instead of 21% profit and having the stock price drop from $6 to $5.90 is a harm, but it hardly compares with not being able to afford a place to live, food to eat, transportation, and clothes to wear. It's a false equivalence to equate the two.
I disagree. Again, labor is just another product. A business that can't employ needed labor doesn't have its stock price go from 21% to 19%, it goes to
zero. Unless they're using slave labor, every single worker there voluntarily accepted an offer, and both parties benefit from that arrangement. If the company can't find someone to work for $20, they'll go to $25 and $30 and so on until they find a seller. Or, in the extreme, until they go out of business. If a person can't find work for $45, they'll go to $40 and $20 and so on until they find a buyer.
There's no magic step between individuals and companies.
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we're having a discussion about why the market may or may not value full-time unskilled labor to the point that an individual can merely survive from the wages of it.
Sorry, but I think this is mostly ridiculous. For one, actual grinding, can't get enough food, working literally to death to survive poverty does not exist in the US. I've been to places where it does and seen it with my own eyes. So here we're playing fast and loose with the words "survive" and "basic necessities of life".
For two, today, right now, the US is in a labor shortage. This problem is not a real one, at least not in the aggregate sense. There are some localized problems, particularly in places like NYC or San Francisco. But go just a day's drive and people are desperate for workers. Every fast food restaurant nearby me has help wanted signs. Chick Fil A pays $15 starting. We're desperate for workers at my job - we will hire you today at $20 to come be a trainee mechanic, and you'll clear $75k in the first year easily. Most people don't want to work the hours, and many others can't pass a drug test. We are squeezed all around.
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Even poor societies full of peasants, serfs and slaves all universally agreed that working people should be paid at least the basic necessities of life.
My friend, your privilege is showing. China had a famine that killed over 30 million people in living memory. It doesn't matter what people agree to - at some point the brute facticity of reality takes over.
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If our society and culture is undervaluing unskilled labor.
Show your work. Someone is accepting the offer, that's what defines value. Why are you upset with the person offering the wage, and not the person accepting it?
Even further, at some point there is a choice between profit and loss. Every dollar a company makes on the bottom line goes somewhere, and not a single dollar from the top line comes from nowhere. And each dollar has an opportunity and capital cost to it. If it is not profitable to employ a person in a particular job, you are asking someone along the chain to lose money. That is not a fictitious idea.
In the end, you only have two choices. People are free to enter into voluntary exchange, or you're going to have to force someone to do something they don't want to do. That is usually the reality of the objection underneath - you don't like what other people are doing. But again, unless there is coercion, your problem is with two parties, not one.