Why $15 An Hour Minimum Wage Will Destroy Black Entrepreneurship

theworldismine13

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Why $15 An Hour Minimum Wage Will Destroy Black Entrepreneurship
Why $15 An Hour Minimum Wage Will Destroy Black Entrepreneurship

Black people have a bad habit of trying to find the most comfortable way to stay at the bottom. We got angry over President Clinton’s reform on TANF. We fight for the expansive rights of conjugal visits. Now, we are in a battle over the minimum wage law. What kills the black community most is that we live in a democracy. What does that mean? It means that, in most cases, majority rules. The unfortunate thing is the majority of blacks are not widely exposed to the art of economics, wealth-building and leveraging. This simply means that oftentimes our concerns will be economically self-centered and short-sighted. It’s not because we are stupid. In fact, that’s far from the truth. But often what we are is underinformed. Let me explain. Employees are part of the machine that brings goods and services to the market. For every good or service that’s produced there is a cost per unit. This cost includes employees. In fact, one of the vulnerabilities that humans have is that we have this thing called “capacity”. We can only do so much in a specified time. Add the emotional aspect of having to inspire or consider the emotions of a worker, and you sometimes have a frustrated employer.

The common myth is that every worker does a good job, just like the myth that every homeless person is a victim. There are cases where workers don’t deliver on the performance they promised in interviews, yet the government holds companies feet to the fire to pay a worker once they are on the clock, no matter their performance. This alone has been one of the top reasons a company elects to pursue replacing workers with technology. The bad workers are putting good workers’ jobs at risk every day. Let me break down everything in segments:

Small Business Disparity - Let’s talk about the segment of business that many unions, workers and government tend to overlook: the small business. I’ve been championing for legislation that allows small (and new) businesses the option to pay lower wages or have corporations’ minimum wage be higher than the minimum wage that small businesses are forced to pay. Why? It’s simple.

New and small businesses have at least 24 months before they are stable, have the sales volume and are competitive. Inside those 2 years is crucially vulnerable for a small business. Put a hefty price tag like a $15 per hour minimum wage and less people will get hired, small business owners may find themselves in much greater debt to satisfy payroll and float expenses, and fewer entrepreneurs will be willing to take the risk at business ownership. Put these obstacles up against a black entrepreneur and we will soon see black entrepreneurship becoming extinct. The real problem is as we go along our daily lives we tend to view businesses as these wealth machines and the truth is only 3% of all businesses in America generate over $100,000 per year. There are way more businesses struggling and trying to make ends meet that those sitting like fat rats.

Black Businesses – When you think about it, most businesses that we are able to start don’t require high skilled labor. We start mom and pop type businesses with small locations, out of our garages or from the trunks of our cars. We are the segment of businesses that are more likely to hire a high school drop-out, convicted felon or recovering drug addict. We are the segment that have less customer traffic and sell less complex items. If we lose that ability to attract workers for less, we lose the chance to build our businesses.

Consider this – Salary and hourly employees are guaranteed to go work and go home every day with more money in their pockets than what they left home with. Businesses, on the other hand don’t have that guarantee.

Government winning – It’s been our culture to turn to government for rescue, rather than turning to ourselves. The fact is, this rhetoric of higher minimum wage only gets the masses going and causes us to endear the politicians. What we are missing is that the real beneficiary of higher wages is the government. Remember, the government’s tax cut is based on percentage. Government’s design is commission-based. It doesn’t have to do more to earn more. We are the ones doing more so it can earn more. Basically, the more you make, the more it takes; even if the service it provides remains unchangeable.

High prices – In economics, it is understood that the higher your costs, the higher your prices will need to be. A massive increase in minimum wage can create slow job growth, hyperinflation and higher unemployment, more so in black communities

Effects - Because we don’t have a strong lending network, diverse customer base and wide diverse industry types of black owned businesses, other ethnic groups may be able to survive such cost increases. We won’t. It may begin with some initial pay increases but in the long run there will be shrinkage in payrolls.

Our Grandparents – Here’s my last point. Remember how entrepreneurial our grandparents were, and somehow that lifestyle didn’t get to our parents? It’s because our grandparents were locked out of the mainstream system that would’ve taught them how to create generational enterprises. So they remained stuck at the “hustler” stage of entrepreneurship, instead of evolving into enterprisers. This made our grandparents look like strugglers and it made true entrepreneurship look unattractive to them and to our parents. So our parents became discouraged, and when America integrated, it became the opportune time for our parents to pursue college, government or corporate jobs. We lost it along the way and now entrepreneurship has become a “back-up” plan. It has become the “Plan B Morning After pill”. When all else fails. When we get felony convictions. When we retire. It’s only then is entrepreneurship an option. But that’s because of the lack of explanation and our ability to breakdown the complexity of entrepreneurship to our children. We have stuck our heads in the sand.

The high school drop outs, convicted felons and low performing people in our communities will go unhired. The current $12 and $13 earners will get hired first, not those currently earning minimum wage. Minimum wage workers’ income is at risk of stopping immediately over the long term until those people retool their skills. What they will be forced to do is return to government for further assistance as a result of their minimum wage protest.

(see my full interview on black entrepreneurship here: www.youtube.com/watch?v=NnWaG9Wj7Pc)

Yeah, I get it. There will be people who will say it’s easy for me to say all of this meanwhile what about the people struggling every day to make ends meet. What I explain to those people is, the workforce is an economic cesspool full of decisions and circumstances. It’s full of investments and returns. Employees are investments. Employers want a return. If a company loses, workers are protected from feeling those losses. Can you truly provide a micro return on a $15 per hour investment? Don’t look at the overall earnings of the company. Look at what you bring to the table. We have to focus on enhancing our collective skills at all costs, rather than forcing benefits to arbitrarily drop down to us.

When you are starting a business, it is an uphill battle. Your fixed costs are often higher than that of a corporation or a company with years in business. Add higher employment costs and we’re done.

What black people are doing is fighting for personal economics that will destroy our collective economics. The fight has to be to get into the best business schools, start businesses, get equal opportunities for government contracts, and yes, we must hold black business owners’ feet to the fire to hire black workers, treat them well and give them growth opportunities. That’s where our energies are best spent. Everything else looks good on paper but will hurt us in reality.

Professor Devin Robinson is an adjunct economics professor, author of “Power M.O.V.E.: How to Transition from Employee to Employer” and founder of Urban Business Institute, www.UrbanBusinessInstitute.com, a business training agency. You can learn more about him at www.DevinRobinson.com.
 

88m3

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with inflation 15$ an hour is going to be nothing anyways. raise prices if necessary, the people with a disposable income to throw at fast food and going out to dinner aren't hurting.

small businesses with perhaps 15 or 30 or less should be able to have a lower minimum wage if they're not netting over 3/5mm but it may need to based on the profession.
 

88m3

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acri1

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Eh, just a matter of degree IMO.

Personally I think $15/hr is too high (especially in areas with a lower cost of living), but at the same time I do think there should be a minimum wage. You shouldn't be able to pay somebody $2/hr just because you might be able to find someone desperate enough to agree to it.


I'd be fine with a federal minimum wage of $10/hr or so, and then if states/localities want to raise it they can. That said I do think the negative impact of min. wage is exaggerated.
 

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Just expand housing subsidies for minimum wage employees. They're gonna have to get subsidized job training once retail and fast food are phased out by tech anyways.

Automation of retail will also phase out cash. Vice will have to be legalized and heavily taxed. The Colorado banking quandary should force the marijuana issue. Jesus, you legalize and heavily tax marijuana and sports betting, you got major government subsidies right there.

Probably should just nationalize marijuana growing operations and sports betting any damn way. Weed for the revenue, sports betting for the revenue AND to prevent conglomerates from fixing games.
 

MrSinnister

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Look at people who would rather just expand the most unpopular system ever, welfare, rather than "Pay The Man". I've seen this before. So people don't want to pay a Wal-Mart or fast food worker a penny over minimum wage, but watch executives keep increasing their salaries year after year. Lower wage workers work hard to just get a 25 cent raise every six months to a year, where that cost savings is negated by 1M raises?

It's the utmost stupid argument, and why Blacks will always be slaves in the country they keep building. You value each other for shyt, and constantly feel good about being the "exceptional" Blacks, because you have some looks or intelligence.

The real story is a $15 dollar wage will be an initial shock to the economy, but only because stupid people will run to spend their money, instead of saving it. If people let themselves be treated like New Yorkers, they will get pimped, as they should. However, if they save their money to move to places where the cost of living is cheaper, use it to invest and learn in the market (while buying only what they need to survive), prices will plummet as well as a chance of a boom bust economy cycle. The bust happens because companies over expand and people don't have the cash to keep buying their products at the inflated rate the stock market says they should be selling them. If more people are investing in said stocks, that capital can be used in paying the workers, as well as providing the incentives to buy their products.

There. I solved economics for ya'll.:beli:
 

NZA

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if the worker is expected to make poverty a lifestyle then i guess small business will as well. at some point, welfare, the sharing economy, and illegal markets will run out of capacity to make up for low wages. either deal with it now, or deal with it later. this is a fact of life, we cant act like we can tell people to make less but not have their needs met through other avenues.

also, most small businesses dont have the luxury of searching the entire earth for new customers. they usually have to hope enough people around them can afford what they offer. keeping wages low and productivity high is going to bite them in the ass, unfortunately. the sad thing is that this is not really most small businesses' fault. larger corporations corrupting our politics are more to blame, but the small business will suffer more consequence.
 

Susmakech

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What is the minimum wage in the U.S ? In Canada it is $10,55/hour. We'll reach 15$/hour by 2045. In Canada most of the time the yearly minimum wage raise is below the inflation rate. In an ideal world the minimum wage would be of $14-$15 and it would encourage the lower/working class to buy more. But it's simply impossible and it would totally break the economy.
How the government could possibly pay each worker $5 more for each hours worked? So an average of $50 more per day. It's hundreds of millions of dollars everyday if not a billion for the USA. You just can't invent money you gotta take it somewhere.The prices of every little product or service would go up at an incredible rate, more taxes, more income taxes, more budget cuts in sectors which desperatly need a budget raise.
That being said i'm nowhere near being an economy expert but I own my own company and went to entrepreneur school.
 

88m3

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What is the minimum wage in the U.S ? In Canada it is $10,55/hour. We'll reach 15$/hour by 2045. In Canada most of the time the yearly minimum wage raise is below the inflation rate. In an ideal world the minimum wage would be of $14-$15 and it would encourage the lower/working class to buy more. But it's simply impossible and it would totally break the economy.
How the government could possibly pay each worker $5 more for each hours worked? So an average of $50 more per day. It's hundreds of millions of dollars everyday if not a billion for the USA. You just can't invent money you gotta take it somewhere.The prices of every little product or service would go up at an incredible rate, more taxes, more income taxes, more budget cuts in sectors which desperatly need a budget raise.
That being said i'm nowhere near being an economy expert but I own my own company and went to entrepreneur school.

Grabbed from google a lot of this is changing though. Also tipped workers make considerably less maybe 4 or 5 an hour in NYS but idk. To me also unless you have a small labor pool to begin with you've got to pay a decent wage to attract responsible help anyways. I believe also having a low minimum wage adds to higher costs on the backend that people are forgetting/willfully overlooking.


  1. $7.25 - The federal minimum wage for covered nonexempt employees is $7.25per hour effective July 24, 2009. The federal minimum wage provisions are contained in the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA). Many states also have minimum wage laws.
    U.S. Department of Labor - Find It By Topic - Wages - Minimum Wage

  1. New York/Minimum wage
    8.75 USD per hour
    Dec 31, 2014
Each state sets it own minimum wage as well.


Not seeing the logic in the bolded there, m8.
 

blackzeus

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We're all gonna work for Walmart soon :heh: All jokes aside, it's nothing you can do as a small business except hope to be bought out by a larger business. Sh*t they got franchises for used clothing stores now, there's no small business left unturned when it comes to Wall St money. A few years from now Dairy Queen will dominate 80% of the lemonade stand market :heh: As a small business you gotta be more nimble and offer the customers what the big boys can't, that feeling of community, of being around the way, authentic.
 
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