I would like the minimum wage to raise in Greece since its well below the cost of life. Simply, a full-time job with a minimum wage isn't enough to pay a whole rent in most cases, let alone utilities. (Although, compared to the US, Greece is a state waiting for bankruptcy, and youth unemployment is still around 50%, without factoring in the people who are currently enlisted in the army for their military service)Edit: Also those who are employed are either doing their practice, or are paid minimum wage and working full time or part-time, and most often they are bar, coffee-shop related jobs or even restaurants in tourist areas. Most of the people who work in stores as clerks and so forth are around their 30's and above. (It was a running joke some time ago that if you had a Master's degree in the UK? Then you will land a fitting cashier job at a chain store and be paid slightly higher than the minimum wage)
I support a minimum wage because I don't trust companies to pay their employees a reasonable wage. It's in their best interests to pay employees as little as possible.
But on the other hand, the majority of employees make above minimum wage.
Quote from: Not Comms Officer on April 07, 2015, 10:01:37 AMBut on the other hand, the majority of employees make above minimum wage. And it's worth noting that this majority is 96% of the US workforce making more than the federal minimum wage.
Quote from: ϟϟDASmlgREICHquickscopeϟϟ on April 07, 2015, 10:09:14 AMQuote from: Not Comms Officer on April 07, 2015, 10:01:37 AMBut on the other hand, the majority of employees make above minimum wage. And it's worth noting that this majority is 96% of the US workforce making more than the federal minimum wage.That's because the federal minimum wage is pathetic. $7.50, I think? It hasn't increased since 2009. You could get paid $7.75/hr, qualify as "above minimum wage", but still be fucked because that's $16k before taxes.
It's in their best interests to pay employees as little as possible.
Hell, some friends of mine are renting small apartment for TWO THOUSAND dollars per month. That's 250 hours of working just to pay for apartment rent. Say nothing about food, electricity, transportation, etc.
Quote from: Not Comms Officer on April 07, 2015, 10:21:25 AM Hell, some friends of mine are renting small apartment for TWO THOUSAND dollars per month. That's 250 hours of working just to pay for apartment rent. Say nothing about food, electricity, transportation, etc.If your apartment rent doubles a typical mortgage payment, it's time to get the fuck out of wherever you're living.
Quote from: Mad Max on April 07, 2015, 09:59:58 AMIt's in their best interests to pay employees as little as possible.Which isn't true, since everybody selling their own labour would be on the minimum wage. . .
Quote from: ϟϟDASmlgREICHquickscopeϟϟ on April 07, 2015, 10:26:42 AMQuote from: Not Comms Officer on April 07, 2015, 10:21:25 AM Hell, some friends of mine are renting small apartment for TWO THOUSAND dollars per month. That's 250 hours of working just to pay for apartment rent. Say nothing about food, electricity, transportation, etc.If your apartment rent doubles a typical mortgage payment, it's time to get the fuck out of wherever you're living.Depends entirely on where you're living. Even in the shittiest parts of Orange County, I'm looking at at least $1250/mo for a shitty studio apartment with bars on the windows and street parking only.
What's minimum wage in Greece right now?
Roughly 580 Euros / month. Rent can usually be covered between 200 Euros and 400 Euros, depending on the area where you live, but utilities in Greece are more expensive. So it's a give and take whether someone can just make it through the month or not at all.Syriza wants to raise it to 750 Euros to just ensure that most people can survive with it.Quote from: Not Comms Officer on April 07, 2015, 09:30:33 AMWhat's minimum wage in Greece right now?
Quote from: Meta Cognition on April 07, 2015, 10:22:15 AMQuote from: Mad Max on April 07, 2015, 09:59:58 AMIt's in their best interests to pay employees as little as possible.Which isn't true, since everybody selling their own labour would be on the minimum wage. . .Forgive my economic ignorance, but this sentence just doesn't make any sense to me. Selling their own labor?
Did you vote for SYRIZA in the election last January?
But the San Francisco Bay Area is still #2 most expensive in the nation though.
With US minimum wage, you'd have to work 60-hour workweeks just to afford rent in the area I live in. But I do have the distinction of living in the 2nd most expensive part of the country. It's probably a similar situation in Athens, whose situation with wages is probably why SYRIZA wants to raise minimum wage. Did you vote for SYRIZA in the election last January?
I gave a blank vote. I figured at the time that Syriza wouldn't do anything, and that Samaras would set the country on fire and sell the ashes to Germany. Many people in my area voted Golden Dawn (roughly 30%) and then it was a disparity between New Democracy and Syriza. I also didn't feel like voiding my vote.Quote from: Not Comms Officer on April 07, 2015, 10:33:56 AMDid you vote for SYRIZA in the election last January?
I wonder what's gonna happen to Nea Dimokratia in future elections, since PASOK has practically been wiped from the electoral map after trading the position of running the government with ND for the past 40 years.
Relevant question: when you people say that minimum wage should be a livable wage, do you mean I should be able to be fully employed at the minimum wage, own my own apartment, live by myself, and not have my income subsidized by welfare/ebt?
Quote from: ϟϟDASmlgREICHquickscopeϟϟ on April 07, 2015, 10:40:21 AMRelevant question: when you people say that minimum wage should be a livable wage, do you mean I should be able to be fully employed at the minimum wage, own my own apartment, live by myself, and not have my income subsidized by welfare/ebt?Own your own apartment? No. You should be able to pay rent somewhere.