Madner Kami wrote: ↑Sun Feb 28, 2021 4:53 pm
BridgeConsoleMasher wrote: ↑Sun Feb 28, 2021 3:55 pm
Madner Kami wrote: ↑Sun Feb 28, 2021 3:16 pm
Thebestoftherest wrote: ↑Sat Feb 27, 2021 12:14 amI disagree there a difference from a local small business having to make cute to keep the lights on versus a multi billion dollar company ripping off it employees so those at the very tops can get even more money
So then you create an environment where small business can outcompete large businesses in regards to wages. As was pointed out, the large businesses will simply dissolve into smaller, yet still connected parts and you've done noone a favour. But there's also another factor there:
It's not unheard of to give subsidy to more diminutive businesses or economies as a matter specifically for development. Whether it's negative taxes or duty favoring is somewhat arbitrary, and a bracketed minimum wage structure is considerably measured.
It's not very comparable the marketing of a big business to a small one. It's like comparing an ocean liner traveling in the pacific to the US military branch of operations in Micronesia.
Negative taxes or subsidies are considerably different to different base minimal wages for the otherwise same work. The former does not impact the outcome for the worker, the later does. And the later's outcome is what you wanted to adress in the first place, remember? You wanted to improve it, but you'd make it worse instead.
You're right, they are different. Subsidies and tax breaks give businesses a boost. While taxes and price floors etc... lead to general inefficiency to a considerable degree. Small businesses benefit directly from the first but only indirectly with the second. This
can be a much more measured approach to regulate a competitive market. Both methods however can easily appreciate the complexities that go into a developing business especially when economies of and returns to scale are not as exploitable.
It's not as if the effects disappear, but corporate hq closing shop in the area isn't as personally dramatic as a local shop going bankrupt though.
There's also the matter of the hyperbolic role that inflated administration/ceo costs generate. As long as they dance around where supply meets demand in each locality then they can more easily develop their internal structure, and it's eerie as far as common understanding of business and wealth transfers go. Indeed it is somewhat controversial.
Sports teams for universities are considered to have inflated budgets that can be going to more important things, but then I read in the university magazine a response supporting the decision, saying that the football team actually brings back the money and then some.
Generally textbooks and college tuition is inflated, and it's a direct result of inflating production/administration cost to a highly elastic demand curve. It's a major political issue getting traction.
It's kind of a vacuum, and it represents a side to business that both conservatives and liberals almost kind of meet on.