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George
F. Will, a syndicated columnist for the Washington Post, rejects
the federal government mandating a raise in the minimum wage. Why?
Because the market is better than Uncle Sam at setting the price of
commodities such as human labor, he writes.
For Will, the plan of the new Democratic
majority now in charge of Congress to increase the federal minimum wage is
a measure of the party's blind faith in FDR's New Deal legislation. That
created some worker-friendly laws. US labor unions and the working class
generally did better for a time.
For Will, the Democrats' nostalgia for that period is out of step with
the modern era. For starters, he is correct to write that wage earners are
a commodity bought and sold in the marketplace. He also proves that a
broken clock tells accurate time twice a day.
The federal minimum wage is a national piece of a global economy, which
Will sidesteps. Let us go where he does not concerning government, the
market and wages. Ready?
Misnamed free-trade pacts put millions of US wage-earners in direct
market competition with lower-paid workers in the developing world. The
North American Free Trade Agreement is a case in point. It took effect
under Democratic President William Jefferson Clinton.
The NAFTA is an example of Uncle Sam intervening in the global and
national marketplace. And this intervention has adjusted wage levels of
most US workers downward, with a mandated increase in the federal minimum
wage a response to such a trend. To wit, a new poll by the Pew Research
Center for the People & the Press "found that Americans expressed far more
doubts about trade than saw it as advantageous." Main Street knows what
time it is, unlike Will.
At the same time, trade pacts protect some highly-paid US workers such
as syndicated columnists like Will. Thus he does not need to fret about
a journalist from a developing country happily applying for his job at a
much lower wage. Will's protected wages thanks to government intervention
are nice work if you can get it.
Thus he writes: "the minimum wage should be the same everywhere: $0. Labor
is a commodity; governments make messes when they decree commodities'
prices."
Well, turnabout is fair play, right? Try this thought experiment. Reject
a mandated increase in the federal minimum wage.
Meanwhile, make Will and other high-paid US workers such as
medical doctors compete with lower-paid journalists and physicians from
developing nations for paid employment in the USA. Maybe then Will's blind
faith in the marketplace would change if/when his employer becomes the
Wal-Mart Post or some such named low-price and low-wage paper.
Such an outcome is possible. Daily newspapers are losing ad revenue
and readers. Meanwhile private equity firms flush with cash are
potential buyers for these papers, and as such would have the power vested
in them as owners to reduce an unclear number of American journalists to
the status of low-paid Wal-Mart workers.
Seth Sandronsky is a member of
Sacramento Area Peace Action and a co-editor of Because People Matter,
Sacramento's progressive paper
Because People Matter. He can be reached at:
bpmnews@nicetechnology.com.
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