I can remember a time not too long ago
in Alberta, when workers with minimal training and not much
experience would refuse to crawl out of bed for a job that paid less
than $80,000 a year — not counting substantial overtime.
I recall the stories from young members
of my family living in the northern part of the province of friends
working the fast food business, who would simply walk out their
employer’s door to the restaurant down the street, and sign up for
better pay — no interview required.
Good times, right? During the boom,
even small Alberta businesses managed to make money paying their
workers substantially more than the new minimum wage of $12.20 an
hour.
I don't recall the price of a burger
and fries or a double-double dropping that much since oil dropped
below $50 a barrel. But it seems now that it has, minimum wage seems
too much to pay for many Alberta small business owners.
The Federation of Independent Business has pulled out the same notes they used five years ago, to warn of
rampant business closures, or of drastic cuts in jobs or hours, if
the legal minimum wage should ever be raised.
News outlets like the Globe and Mail
gave them plenty of space to argue that now is not the time to make a
law such that people working full-time could actually live on their
salary. Not that $12.20 an hour is a living wage in most Alberta
cities, but that point has been lost in the rhetoric.
Besides, we were told while reading from the old notes, Alberta has very few workers earning
minimum wage, and anyway, they are mostly teenagers living free in
their parents' homes.
Well, back in 2010, Alberta did only
have 22,200 workers on minimum wage, according to Stats Canada. But
by 2015, that number had blown up to 51,600.
And according to Alberta Labour
Department figures, more than 296,000 Alberta workers earn less than
the nominal living wage of $15 an hour — the minimum wage mandated
for Oct. 1, 2018. Right now a living wage is calculated to be $17.29
an hour in Calgary,
Almost 80 per cent of minimum wage
earners work permanently on minimum wage in Alberta, while 54 per
cent of them work full-time, and 38 per cent of them have children to
support. Not surprisingly, 62 per cent of them are female.
But this is not just a small business
problem. Government figures say 58.5 per cent of people on minimum
wage work for employers with more than 100 workers.
The point which could have been
stressed five years ago when the the small-business case was last
being made, is this: if the success of your business model includes
paying wages that require a full-time employee to rely on the Food
Bank month to month, maybe it's your business model that's wrong.
The grocery store managers and thrift
store workers in Alberta all know exactly when government support
cheques come out every month. They can track the date by their sales
figures.
A basic text on economics will tell you
that every dollar in an economy will eventually be spent. It's a
rule. For people on the bottom end of the wage scale, every dollar
that is earned is spent locally. That's a rule, too.
Differently stated: if a poor person
gets another dollar, it doesn't take long for a rich person to obtain
it.
So the business case that has been made
over and over again, against expecting employers to support a fair
minimum wage, has not been convincing.
All the money workers earn gets spent
(and for many, spent and then some). All the places where that money
is spent is owned by business owners. The money goes round and round.
Watching that occur is called economics.
In a time when disparity of income
between the rich and the poor has become the root of some rather
dismal politics in North America, I fail to see how the moral
importance of workers being able to live on their pay levels is
somehow wrong.
Especially when it's absolutely known
that when there's more money at the bottom, it just flows upward all
the faster.
Follow Greg Neiman's blog at
ReadersAdvocate.blogspot.ca
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