PeterZ wrote:True, Biochem. Yet many more people are employed by small business owners than large corporations. The minimum wage impacts this group much more severely than large corporate employers.
Yes. They also employ a larger proportion of beginning workers.
I'm officially retired (at some years after 65 - problem finding someone who could do the work), but am still called back at times when they get stuck with something. The last time was this month. While I was working, the owner-boss was talking to someone on a nearby phone. He was discussing how it was hard to find people who would make it their business to consistently do the work they were hired to do. Often he needed to fill in for someone who didn't. Yes, a small business. He started as a laborer there, decades back. He has a number of skilled workers, who get much higher pay, but can also be relied on to do more than the unskilled labor. Whenever possible, he promotes from within - someone who has both learned how to do the more difficult work, and is also experienced in the company is worth more.
When just out of my school, things were slow and, partly because of lack of experience, it wasn't possible to find work fitting my training. Going back to the ranch was possible, but didn't fit my interests. Still single, it was possible to live on
very low income. Later, given work experience and better economic conditions, that changed.
The
real minimum wage is zero - when you can't find work. The basic question here is how to arrange for new workers to get experience without killing the businesses. It looks like different cultures have various methods, as is to be expected. One problem is that some don't balance these needs: in the USA, many of the governments which tried to provide people's wants and needs from taxation are having very bad financial problems. I assume everyone knows the story about killing the golden goose?
Double entry bookkeeping, done right, shows a balance of value going one direction against value going the other way. We pays our money, and gets our goods; the seller loses inventory, but to survive must get enough to replenish it after expenses.
Should an understanding of the basic principles of double entry (as opposed to just skill in doing it) be a requirement for public office
