• @sin_free_for_00_days
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    3 months ago

    Seeing that minimum wage should be at least $26 an hour if it had kept up with inflation, $20 for a selected group of workers, in California is such a fucking stupid thing to get twisted about.

    • @MisterD@lemmy.ca
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      73 months ago

      Fast food work is something few want to do and hard to keep staffed. If you make it $20/h, any other job that seems more appealing will have to match or beat that wage.

    • @Thorny_Insight@lemm.ee
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      -133 months ago

      I don’t understand US wages. I don’t make anywhere near that much as a plumber. 26 bucks an hour is insanely good salary. That’s more than what 95% of people in Finland earn.

      • @Evotech@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        The average salary in Finland is 25 euro per hour ish

        But California is like twice as expensive as Finland

        • @Thorny_Insight@lemm.ee
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          -33 months ago

          Median wage is about 20€/hr but it’s not in any way uncommon to earn way less than that. My SO makes about 12€/h assembling electrical switchboards and she used to make even less when working in daycare. 20€/h is considered a great wage. I dont think any of my friends earns that.

          • @Asafum@feddit.nl
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            3 months ago

            But is that accounting for the difference in monetary value?

            1€ doesn’t = $1

            Well I’ll be a monkeys uncle… 1€ pretty much is = to $1. I must have been thinking about another currency

      • @RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world
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        133 months ago

        Consider that out of your wages in the US (in general) you need to pay your own medical insurance and any other benefits like disability or long-term care, fund your own retirement, your kids’ future college education, car payment, car costs, house payment/renr, and then there’s taxes on top of all that.

        And businesses charge you like you have none of those concerns, they’re designed to extract every possible penny while offering just enough service to keep you from being angry enough to leave to the competitor - if there is one.

        Having travelled quite a bit in Europe it’s just different. Despite the economic upheaval since covid, I find prices more reasonable (not cars or fuel, sorry Americans. Car costs are nuts.), travel is easy, rents aren’t as crazy, and of course the State does take more tax but Europeans get so much more back that Americans have to pay for out of pocket. No idea what other fees are like for necessary things like cellular or home data connections. We also don’t tax our businesses for squat, relatively.

        That’s why American wages are nuts. We have to pay out of pocket for things that the EU gets out of taxes, plus different lifestyles.

        Not really a comprehensive list, but just the gist of what American wages are expected to cover. And a lot of American wages are absolute crap, we just don’t get to see that in this example.

        • @Riven@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          13 months ago

          Oh hey I lived there for years and currently live literally 15 minutes south in a nearby city. Downtown long Beach is pricy as heck cause it’s rich people area by the beach. There’s Def under 2k 1 bedrooms out there. Heck I lived in a 2 bedroom 2 parking, mid, gated apartment complex in long Beach for 1550 a smidge over a year ago. I currently live 15 minutes south in a nearby city in a decent gated community, 2 bedrooms, 1 parking, 2200 monthly and management is fairly solid at fixing stuff quickly.

          Just to put stuff into perspective. Minimum wage should still be over 20 here for everyone, it’s crazy that it isn’t since everything is so expensive.

      • @Wiz@midwest.social
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        43 months ago

        Yeah but how much does your health care cost in Finland?

        In the USA, take out a few hundred Dollars a month, just for the privilege of seeing a doctor. Then it pays nothing for you until you go over some threshold (“deductible”) of something like $2000 to $10000. Also, all drugs cost 10x more than outside of the US.

        But, yay America. (Sad kazoo sound.)

      • @melpomenesclevage@lemm.ee
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        13 months ago

        Yes but we have to pay private companies that recursively gouge us for medical care, housing, etc. A studio apartment in Los Angeles is ~1k/mo and won’t rent to you unless youre making 3k, healthcare, if you have a chronic condition like diabetes, can easily exceed 1k/mo, and food is both trashy and overpriced here.

      • @iopq@lemmy.world
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        -233 months ago

        $26 an hour would have negative effects on minorities and young people. Right now people with little work experience and education can easily still have a job. That would not be the case if the minimum wage was increased, since fewer companies would be able to afford to pay you $26 an hour to be trained