When you compare labor to an apple how are you not commoditizing it?
Zobel said:
And just to be clear, you unfairly maligned Adam Smith earlier. He staunchly advocated that workers should receive an equitable share of the productive value of their work, and said that the equitable share would be enough for them to tolerably fed, clothed, and housed.
The strange thing here is that I am arguing for value as economic fact, a reality - what someone is willing to buy and sell a thing for.
Y'all are standing outside the transaction telling one or actually both parties that they are wrong in their judgment.
That doesn't mean I don't want people to be well fed, well clothed, or well housed. What it means is that value is nothing more than an information signal. When the value of something moves against the relative value of something else, that has actual meaning. If the productive value of labor falls below the point where the person selling that labor can take the proceeds and buy food, shelter, and clothing for themselves, that is an VERY important piece of information for them and everyone else. Like any other economic signal it is telling you there is an imbalance somewhere. Fudging it with shoulds and oughts takes that existing imbalance and makes it even worse.
Zobel said:
You gave examples of illegal and harmful things, just like the person who talked about pimps and prostitution.
I'm talking about whether someone makes $6 or $8 an hour.
I'm not advocating for an amoral society. I'm saying arbitrarily setting a floor or ceiling for a price of anything is stupid and counterproductive, and will eventually have negative consequences, regardless of the intent behind it.
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The strange thing here is that I am arguing for value as economic fact, a reality - what someone is willing to buy and sell a thing for.
Zobel said:
Sorry, I take the imago dei as axiomatic, along with the rest of the scriptures, so I'm fine with saying that murder for hire is different than negotiating a wage in good faith between two people.
Zobel said:
Organ sales violate the sanctity of the body, which is in the image of God… prostitution is professional sexual immorality…euthanasia is still murder. I don't get it.
There is no sin involved in my scenario.
Zobel said:
Show me where it is a sin to pay an employee less than the federal minimum wage of the United States? For Pete's sake.
Zobel said:
Congress defines what a just wage is now?
Zobel said:
Congress defines what a just wage is now?
You realize that if everyone followed that, many jobs would just stop existing. You argued that you're not obligated to employ people at a loss, so this is effectively saying it's better for a person to have no job at all. You agree with that?
Zobel said:
Yeah, but I was pretty specific that I find nothing immoral about someone being paid $7 vs $7.25. Your answer is the Catholic catechism.
Zobel said:
Justice: A Short Play
"Please sir, I need a job. I have the skills to do x."
I can only pay you $7 and still make moderate recompense. But the cost of living here requires $8, so the Catechism says it would be a sin for me to pay you.
"But I need the money, I'll do it for $7! It will help both of us."
I'm sorry, but your opinion about the benefit is irrelevant. Go in peace, be warm and well fed.
~fin~
Zobel said:
Part II
Hey, good to see you again. I have made some process improvements, now I can afford to pay you $8!
Wonderful news sir, thank you! I didn't tell you my good news yet - I had a child! This job will help me pay my rent.
Oh… I'm sorry. I can employ a single person at $8, but your cost of living is clearly higher since you have a family. I can't give you the job, it would be a sin.
Please, I need the money. I'm willing to work, $8 is enough for me.
Im sorry. Go in peace, be warm and well fed.
~fin~
Zobel said:
Read it closer. It says the amount has to provide a dignified livelihood, hence living wage.
You gotta watch those provisos, man.
Zobel said:
As I said before, what good is it in reality if your obligation ends when you can't afford to pay the wage? The dude doesn't have a job, and now he has even less opportunity to make money because of an arbitrary price floor. Now instead of job and some money, he has no job and no money. This is what happens when you set a price floor above the actual economic value of a transaction, where people derive benefit - you preclude transactions from occurring.
Zobel said:
Read your own quote. "Remuneration for the work should guarantee man the opportunity to provide a dignified livelihood for himself and his family".
Zobel said:
Because the whole edge case IS the problem. The problem is precisely when both people want to make a transaction and you're over here saying it is unjust because it's not enough money.
The entire premise being presented is "what happens when the price of unskilled labor is below the cost of living?" Your answer is - lol not my problem, if I can't pay a living wage I can't pay a living wage.
Zobel said:
We're halfway there - at least you seem to agree that arbitrary minimum wage laws are inherently harmful.
Right, and many examples have been given where a third party prevents a mutually beneficial transaction. These are all governed by law whether it is overtly criminal like selling murder for hire, socially destructive like child labor, treasonous like violating embargos, or just plain old labor laws like overtime rules. There is more to the world than mutual individual benefit. The effect of that transaction on other individuals matters (especially in the murder for hire situation) as does the effect on society at large. Economic transactions don't take place in a vacuum.Quote:
Y'all are standing outside the transaction telling one or actually both parties that they are wrong in their judgment.
You can do the same example in a location where it's legal without threats of violence.Zobel said:
...so your go-to is a sublegal profession that is often tantamount to slavery, is based on implicit or explicit threats of violence, and because of its illegal nature has no recourse, and therefore is at least to a large degree involuntary? Yeah, that's exploitation.
Because you are relying on their ignorance to make a poor choice and reduce their income 25%. This is a far cry from love your neighbor as yourself.Quote:
Can you tell me why hiring someone willing to accept my offer of $15 for starting wage, when most of my competitors are paying $20, is me taking advantage of them?
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I don't agree that a person needs to know all the relevant details to be able to negotiate.
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You don't need to know the other party's benefit to know your own. It certainly helps, but it isn't necessary. It may change your opinion to know the total amount of the pie that is being divided, but it doesn't change your needs.
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Some of the objections here seem to want to have their cake (pie?) and eat it too, in that regard. Why should one party in the negotiation be forced to divide the pie to some third party's arbitrary definition of fair?
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Why does the employer need to consider not only his own negotiating objectives but ALSO take care for the negotiating objectives other other agent? We don't do this in any other transaction.
Correct I don't and I'm not advocating for that. This is an exchange with equal footing and small stakes. What you are advocating for in employment is not saying this employee is worth $X to me, you are saying I won't pay more than $X for this employee let's see how little I can pay given their information disadvantages.Quote:
You don't ask yourself - is this sale price sustainable for this company? Should I really pay 50% off for this item? What if they're losing money? You say "is this worth $x to me?" and move on with your decision.
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Why do we expect employers to be paternalistic in negotiations in order for it to be fair? It seems like a soft form of bigotry. Don't employees know their own objectives?
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And the business may need to compromise for fear of going bankrupt.
It doesn't. We interrupt markets all the time for a variety of reasons, I already pointed this out.Quote:
I don't buy that supply and demand should govern every single transaction except for this one.
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There seems to be this lurking idea that somehow an employer making a profit is OK, but only to a point. And further, that there's some obligation to share profits with employees whether they know, or ask, or have someone else willing to do the same work without that profit sharing.
I don't have to say what the right amount of profit is, I think two fully informed individuals will come to that decision themselves, and I think that result will be pretty different than what we see today with employers hiring inexperienced people at higher wages than experienced ones.Quote:
I don't know how you can justify that, or say what the "right" amount of profit is. Are you willing to work open book for someone to come and say that maybe you're being overpaid for your job? Why should anyone have to do that? What's fair is voluntary exchange, because both parties walk away with mutual benefit. The degree of benefit does not have to be equal.
What do you mean their "true value". This is nakedly contradicting what your fundamental premise is. That the true value is nothing more than what people are willing to pay when the government isn't in the way. Capitalism is freedom covered freedom with freedom fries right? So why doesn't that allow free association, freedom for employers to collude? Freedom to have a monopoly or cartel?Quote:
When businesses do it we call it collusion and the reason it is illegal is because it limits competition to artificially raise prices above their true value. What's the difference?
What lack of competition. I'm not arguing for a closed shop. Hire scabs.Quote:
This is basically saying "preventing competition in a market changes the price." Yeah. Exactly.
Isn't willfully holding back information that you have that your prospective employee does not have and would help their negotiating position fundamentally deceptive?Quote:
I don't see anything immoral about it, unless you're being deceptive to achieve this.
Except the nature of employment makes underpaying far less economically foolish than you are arguing here. The line of successful businessmen who've done it is very long.Quote:
The real question is, would anyone pay an employee who matches productivity and output of others at half the wage? A fool might, but doing so would in the long run be against his own best interest. And you know what? He should be free to do that stupid, bad thing. Just like that employee should be free to accept something less than he should get.
I picked a big number (and it's a number we can find real examples of people getting 50% raises by leaving their company are not hard to find) to illustrate the point. There is no perfect knowledge of market value for labor, so 1% is certainly below our ability to know and 50% is certainly above our ability to know.Quote:
The only reason this is outrageous is because you picked a big number. The principle is the same at 50%, 5%, 1%, or one penny. Should people be allowed to be paid differently at all for the same work? Why or why not?
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And no, I do not define paying that employee more than what he asked for charity. What I said was charity was paying above the value of the work product. In other words, charity would be me sacrificing for his benefit.