by Dan Mitchell | Apr 26, 2015 | Blogs, Taxation
It must be fun to be a leftist. You get to spend other people’s money. But that’s just for starters. Using the power of majoritarianism, you also get to tell the rest of the country what to do, how to behave, and even what to eat. Best of all, you can be a complete...
by Dan Mitchell | Mar 15, 2015 | Blogs, Economics, Minimum Wage
A few days ago, we used supply-and-demand curves to illustrate how taxes reduce economic output.Supply-and-demand curves also can be used to examine the impact of minimum wage laws on the labor market. Workers understandably will be willing to supply more labor at...
by Dan Mitchell | Jan 15, 2015 | Blogs, Economics, Minimum Wage
It’s very frustrating to write about the minimum wage. How often can you make the elementary observation, after all, that you’ll get more unemployment if you try to make businesses pay some workers more than they’re worth? But it’s my mission to promote economic...
by Brian Garst | Oct 5, 2014 | Blogs, Economics, Minimum Wage
The great Krugtron the Invincible argues the minimum wage can be increased without much consequence. He says there’s “hardly any cost to raising it,” and that “we can raise these wages without losing lots of jobs.” Notice the weasel...
by Dan Mitchell | May 19, 2014 | Big Government, Blogs, Economics, Minimum Wage
I’m beginning to think that people from some nations are smarter and more rational than others. That may explain, for instance, why voters in Estonia support fiscal restraintwhile voters in France foolishly think the gravy train can continue forever. But I’m not...