Milton Friedman on Minimum Wage

amagilly
15 Jun 200803:39

Summary

TLDRIn this critical analysis, the speaker argues that well-intentioned policies like the minimum wage law often have the opposite effect of their intended goals. Rather than helping low-income workers, the minimum wage increases unemployment, especially among teenagers and low-skilled individuals. The speaker highlights the role of trade unions in promoting these laws, claiming they primarily benefit special interest groups by reducing competition. Ultimately, the speaker calls for policies to be judged by their real-world effects, not their labels or intentions.

Takeaways

  • 😀 Minimum wage laws often have unintended negative effects, contrary to their well-intentioned goals.
  • 😀 The coalition behind minimum wage laws typically includes well-meaning sponsors and special interest groups, such as trade unions.
  • 😀 Trade unions, especially monopolistic craft trade unions, are identified as a key special interest group benefiting from minimum wage laws.
  • 😀 Minimum wage laws are designed to raise wages for low-income workers, but they often result in higher unemployment among those with low skills.
  • 😀 Teenagers, particularly those entering the labor market, are disproportionately affected by high teenage unemployment due to minimum wage laws.
  • 😀 Prior to the 1950s, teenage unemployment was not as high, but a significant increase occurred after minimum wage rates were raised rapidly.
  • 😀 Minimum wage laws effectively encourage employers to discriminate against workers with low skills, as they cannot be employed at a wage lower than the legal minimum.
  • 😀 The consequences of minimum wage laws include increased unemployment and higher poverty, especially among disadvantaged groups.
  • 😀 The people most harmed by minimum wage laws are often those that the laws are intended to help, such as black workers.
  • 😀 The real purpose of minimum wage laws is seen as reducing competition for trade unions, helping them maintain higher wages for their privileged members.

Q & A

  • What is the main argument against the minimum wage law presented in the transcript?

    -The main argument is that minimum wage laws, while well-intentioned to help low-income workers, actually lead to higher unemployment and harm the very people they are meant to help, especially teenagers and minorities. The law forces employers to pay higher wages than some workers' skills justify, making them unemployable.

  • How does the minimum wage law affect teenage unemployment?

    -Teenage unemployment is significantly higher than the overall unemployment rate, with the transcript suggesting that the minimum wage law is a major factor. Before the law's drastic increases in the 1950s, teenage unemployment was not as high, but as the law raised wage floors, employers were less willing to hire teens with lower skills.

  • What role do trade unions play in the minimum wage law according to the speaker?

    -Trade unions, especially monopolistic craft unions, are described as the 'special interests' who benefit from the minimum wage law. They use the law to reduce competition for their higher-skilled, unionized members by raising the wage floor, making it harder for non-union workers to find jobs.

  • What is the 'Unholy Coalition' mentioned in the transcript?

    -The 'Unholy Coalition' refers to the alliance between well-meaning advocates of the minimum wage law (the 'do-gooders') and the special interests, like trade unions, who use the law for their own benefit, rather than to help the poor.

  • How does the speaker suggest the minimum wage law affects people with low skills?

    -The minimum wage law forces employers to either pay higher wages than a low-skilled worker can justify, or not hire them at all. This results in unemployment for people with insufficient skills to meet the wage floor set by the law.

  • According to the speaker, why do employers avoid hiring low-skilled workers under the minimum wage law?

    -Employers avoid hiring low-skilled workers because the law mandates they pay a higher wage than the worker's skills would justify. Hiring such a worker would be a financial loss for the employer, leading to a reluctance to employ them.

  • What is the speaker's view on the real purpose of the minimum wage law?

    -The speaker believes the real purpose of the minimum wage law is not to help low-income workers, but to reduce competition for trade unions by raising the wage floor, thereby benefiting higher-skilled union workers.

  • What negative consequence does the speaker identify for minorities with respect to minimum wage laws?

    -The speaker argues that minimum wage laws disproportionately hurt minority groups, particularly African Americans, by making it harder for them to enter the labor market. The law increases unemployment among those with lower skills, many of whom belong to minority groups.

  • What does the speaker mean by saying the minimum wage law is 'anti-negro'?

    -The speaker is suggesting that the minimum wage law has a disproportionately negative impact on African Americans, who are more likely to have lower skill levels and therefore face higher unemployment due to the law. The speaker argues that the law effectively discriminates against them.

  • What does the speaker suggest about the effectiveness of minimum wage laws in achieving their intended goals?

    -The speaker believes that minimum wage laws do not achieve their intended goal of reducing poverty. Instead, they increase unemployment, especially among the most vulnerable workers, and benefit trade unions by reducing competition for higher-skilled labor.

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Related Tags
Minimum WageUnintended ConsequencesTeenage UnemploymentPoverty IncreaseSpecial InterestsLabor MarketEconomic PolicyTrade UnionsSocial ProgramsGovernment RegulationsInequality