mind_messing
Posts: 3393
Joined: 10/28/2013 Status: offline
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ORIGINAL: RangerJoe quote:
ORIGINAL: mind_messing quote:
ORIGINAL: RangerJoe quote:
ORIGINAL: mind_messing quote:
ORIGINAL: Cap Mandrake The market solution is for maltreated workers to quit and for the employer to be forced to raise wages until they can find a workforce willing to do the job. In theory. In practice, quite different as there's someone desperate enough to work under poor conditions. As others have stated, it's not as if corporate interests were strongly interested in working conditions prior to all this... quote:
ORIGINAL: Lowpe quote:
ORIGINAL: Cap Mandrake The market solution is for maltreated workers to quit and for the employer to be forced to raise wages until they can find a workforce willing to do the job. It is a crappy job. I would rather pick fruit or cut lettuce or push a broom at a work site. I don't know, as an entry level job it teaches skills...I can see climbing the ladder to a grocery store butcher. In my neck of the woods that is a very good career for someone lacking a technical college degree. I know several grocery store butchers that went on to open their own small stores...I suspect that might be a bit suspect now though. It is not for everyone, but as a boy growing up we were always cleaning fish to eat. That has probably changed over the years. I genuinely struggle to imagine any serious career progression from something like a meat packing plant. Granted, there will be some decent progression through the ranks so to speak, but let's not pretend that it is the norm for some guy on the factory floor will be CEO in twenty years time. As far as the meat packing goes, one place where a lot of undocumented (illegal immigrant) workers were gone, the line for applicants stretched around the block. That was in the densely populated state of Iowa. That was just one situation, there are others. As far as that kind of job, it is an incentive to better yourself to get a better job. Either in pay or working conditions. It does teach valuable job skills like being at a certain place, at a certain time, and be ready to work. Sadly, too many people don't have those skills. I could post other things, but that could get difficult. PMs are welcomed to discuss things. Yeah...about that. You've seen the current unemployment rate right? Where are these "better jobs"? I think you've a narrow view on it - skills is absolutely a component, but there needs to be opportunity to apply those skills. 78% of Americans live paycheck to paycheck, so it's a challenge for, say, meat plant workers to get a new suit (and that assumes that the job is local and doesn't involve any transport costs). The "bootstraps" narrative hasn't been working as many think it does for quite some time... Well then, since the economies are not going to get better, quit letting in the immigrants. Especially since so many are going to decide to retire early, there won't be any job openings. Nope, none at all. Hmm, I think you should think through the ramifications of that policy decision a little more... quote:
There are places that accept donated clothing for job seekers. Which will not provide universal coverage, but glad you agree that there is more to enhancing employment prospects that just skill. quote:
As far as people living paycheck to paycheck, is that because they have a house payment, a car payment, a truck payment, a boat payment, an ATV payment and a snowmobile payment? Maybe even more than one ATV and/or snowmobile that they are paying on? Not really the demographic that we're discussing, is it? Extracts from the linked article: "51 percent of those making less than $50,000 usually or always live paycheck to paycheck to make ends meet, 73 percent are in debt." "The majority of workers (81 percent) have worked a minimum wage job, and 71 percent of them were not able to make ends meet financially during that time — more than half (54 percent) had to work more than one job." So as much as you'd like to think that it's middle-class America spending on the prestige goods, it isn't.
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