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I worry that the first line is too simplified. Just because someone does something voluntarily, does not mean they are not being taken advantage of.
Clearly things get more complicated, for example when you have something like fraud. But in the essence fraud is deception - deliberate misinformation. That comes back to the early component of a voluntary exchange which is reasonable level of information. Fraud deliberately defies that.
I'm not sure, absent fraud and the like, there is much room in economic concept for "taking advantage" of someone in a voluntary exchange. The case of a man dying for thirst bartering his life for a sip of water stretches the spirit of voluntary exchange, and that would be where I would agree with you (he can't walk away from the deal and live). But even then, short sighted as it is, and cruel as it is, there is mutual benefit derived from that transaction. People can have make bad deals and have regrets, but I don't know how you can stop that absent pure paternalism.
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But, those potential employees clearly have bargaining power. And clearly the person that harvests your food or cleans your office or stocks your groceries has far less bargaining power.
Define bargaining power? If you mean the ability to command a wage in absolute value, of course. But if you mean, the ability to hold out for whatever price they like, I completely disagree. The absolute wage they can earn will be limited by supply and demand - and someone accepting an offer (voluntarily, for mutual benefit) that will set the floor on value. But they have as much bargaining power as anyone else does in any transaction. Just because a person can command a higher price for the goods they sell doesn't fundamentally change any of this.
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There are proposals out there to increase minimum wages or require that employers meet some minimum benefits to employees who are on the lowest end of the bargaining power spectrum. And while I acknowledge your criticisms of those proposals, I don't understand how 'your' system would protect against compensation for low wage and unskilled jobs being pushed down to extreme levels.
Well, for one, minimum wage doesn't actually help anyone. It's inflationary, all it does is increase price levels in the general sense. Perversely it has the greatest adverse effect on those who are least able to absorb the price increase, which are exactly the people it is supposed to help. Realistically I think the answer to "then why do politicians increase the minimum wage?" is because many labor deals are negotiated at multiples of minimum wage, so the general minimum wage level becomes an important bargaining chit and an opportunity for financial gain straight from legislation for people making much more money than the minimum itself.
Compensation won't be pushed down to extreme levels, it will match the actual value of the work. That value already exists, the work already has value. Reducing the artificial floor will actually increase the number of jobs available, because jobs which have negative value at minimum wage (e.g., when actual value of the labor is less than current minimum wage) simply go away. That's great news for business owners and people who don't need the job for subsistence living - like teenagers and students, for example, who can come to terms in a mutually beneficial deal. If not, they won't, and the job will either be rolled into another job, or be done away with.
If something can't happen, it won't. If the labor is a net negative, owners and shareholders will not spend the money at a net loss - or those that will will do so out of charity. Either way, the value of labor is a real thing. You can trade the product of labor for a price, and that price is set by someone else voluntarily buying it. If you artificially inflate the price of labor,
the value of the labor product does not go up. If you uniformly inflate the price of labor, you also contribute to general price increases, with attending short term impacts on sales as prices increase relative to demand.
Also, unlike voluntary exchange, direct cash injection in the form of subsidy or welfare results in a winner and loser with mathematical certainty. The first person who receives the first dollar has a purchasing power increase over everyone else. As that injected money moves its way through the economy, general price levels rise, and the hypothetical last person to receive that dollar has actually paid for it through price increases they've endured until that time, but receive no benefit from receiving the inflated dollar.
If we actually get a point where the reality of the situation confronts us and we simply have too many people with negative labor value, we are in an economic situation that is a crisis no matter what system you're running. Socialism, capitalism, whatever, you have an upside down labor pool - you have more people than jobs. And no different than a bubble in any market leading to overproduction and excess supply, that has to be worked through. You can write down widgets and cars, and you can engage in charity or welfare to feed people - the end result is destruction of capital until the oversupply corrects itself.
In the meantime - if we really are in a situation where the value of a laborer is less than the actual subsistence cost (meaning, not including a netflix subscription or iphone or ps5) - the avenue to take of people is no different whether it is handled via charity or welfare. It is a zero sum in that regard.
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The employer is going to pay that person that absolute minimum.
But this is nonsense even at slight inspection. Every employer pays every worker what they can. Step back and it is still true - everyone purchases everything they can at the minimum price they can find. Or do you go on Amazon and sort price high to low? Given equal product - like unskilled labor - why would you arbitrarily pay more? And given equal product - like a first year engineer - why would you arbitrarily pay more? In the end, it doesn't matter what level you're working at, your employer is paying you for the value you produce. Maybe it is a little more fuzzy for white collar jobs, harder to connect labor value to tangible goods, but the act of valuation and entering into a deal for mutual benefit is exactly the same.
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And if the employee objects, the employer will find someone 70% as good for 70% the cost and move along.
If the employer was paying 42% more than necessary for what his business needed to operate, why is it bad for him to correct that?
Why should either party be forced to engage in a deal that they do not feel is in their best interest?Again, this happens at all levels. Employers fire high salaried employees too, if they make unreasonable demands and can't come to terms. And, incidentally, employers also give raises to employees who add value. Most people aren't cannibals in business, they're trying to do their jobs and put high value on their good employees.
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We all rely massively on low income workers, but we don't seem to value them.
how should we value them?
this is like saying, we all value amazon prime, but none of us insist on paying more than they ask for their service.