Originally posted by Zahlanzi...You misread your link, I guess. $200/month is plenty for one person, thrifty. That can double or triple when you're hungry and self-indulgent. Your link agrees with me here.
a single adult needs 205$ a week for the "thrifty" plan. in 2014. it's been 3 years since then. Do you think "thrifty" is an assuring term for someone working a highly physical demanding job? ...
Ente is entertainment, sorry. I low-balled that figure too. $25/wk! Wow. You better be self-sacrificing to move ahead as a poor person.
Originally posted by EladarOnly some prices go up. Many things are cheaper in the US than in Zambia or South Africa.
Cost of living is relative. Prices are set by demand. Try to rent a place charging $600 per month when no one makes more than $50 a month?
As people make more money, prices go up accordingly.
The post that was quoted here has been removedLife is hard. Its even harder here in South Africa on less than the equivalent of US minimum wage. And even harder in Zambia on a tenth of that.
In the USA, one can survive without a phone and internet access, but that lack would
make it much harder to find a job or to get a better job.
Same here. Nevertheless, the vast majority of people do not have a land line and fast internet access. Cell phones, yes, most people have them, but they cost more here than in the US.
Originally posted by ZahlanziCan't take criticism I see.
this
is
about
the
US
minimum
wage.
do you want to make a budget based on the US minimum wage and on living in the US?
I have already pointed out that I have live on a lower budget than that all my life. Most things are more expensive here btw. You mentioned car payments. I have never in my life bought a car that required monthly payments. I could not afford a new car. My car was made in 1997 and I paid cash for it.
The post that was quoted here has been removedThat is most certainly true. The definition of 'living' also varies much from place to place. The reality is, however, that many things in the US are cheaper than much of the rest of the world and the vast majority of people there, including those on minimum wage, enjoy a higher standard of living than those in the rest of the world (on average). If a moral argument is being made, then those in the rest of the world should be considered too.
Originally posted by EladarDepends on the house and the location.
Rent?
Utility bills?
Electricity in Zambia is reasonably priced because they have massive hydropower. The only problem is the power is off much of the time because they haven't been maintaining - building new power plants.
Water, I don't know.
Here in SA, my electricity bill is higher than in Zambia, but water is included with the flat (rented).
I don't know how they compare with the US. But utility bills are not that significant a part of my monthly expenditure. Rent and food are the biggest components.
Originally posted by KazetNagorraIt makes politicians gleeful that they have something to demagogue about.
Scandinavian countries don't have a minimum wage. You don't need one with sufficiently good welfare benefits.
That extra few dollars an hour sure is better to talk about than actually running the country when you are campaigning.
But you are right, a minimum wage makes no sense at all. No one puts a gun to someone's head to work for a certain wage, and it is always assumed that those working must support a family on it when that is not always the case It's insane.
08 Jan 17
Originally posted by mchillActually, I agree with KN on this one.
What sh76 is trying to say is "I refuse to admit this minimum wage is appallingly low, and I'll be able to get out of admitting it by using using government benefits as an escape hatch"
sh76 - You're a smart guy, your "slippery" language strongly suggests you should have been in politics! 😛
If the goal is to get people to have enough money to live properly, a guaranteed basic income, or at least a robust social welfare system, is far better than a higher minimum wage.
A high minimum wage forces an employer to pay more than is economically efficient, which makes it more likely that he will hire fewer people or outsource the job (or, worse, force him to stop operating). Moreover, many people who make minimum wage don't need a living wage. They're summer job teenagers or college students living with their parents or on campus on the government's dime.
Making sure people who need a living have one is laudable (the arguments on both sides of a guaranteed minimum income are interesting, but that's for another thread). Creating an artificially high minimum wage to secure that goal is exceedingly inefficient.