US increases federal Minimum Wage - "aspiring to more burger"
iosaf | 27.07.2008 13:33 | Globalisation | Workers' Movements | World
This of course raises many questions. Not least of which might be : how much can you buy for $6.55 or £3.14 or would it be worth you spending a Sunday afternoon comparing wage levels between your locality and some other state in Europe?
However if you examine the nutritional analysis provided by the Big Mac manufacturers you will soon notice that all Big Macs aren't the same. A US Big Mac gives you 540 kcal whereas ostensibly the same burger sold in Europe only offers 493kcal. The European or British Big Mac has nearly double the salt, less weight, less protein and more fat.
The average Big Mac in the USA costs $3.57. Thus we can see that the average minimum wage worker may now afford to buy one Big Mac an hour with enough left over for a large fries and drink, perhaps even a cup of tea. Whereas the average Briton who enjoys the top range of minimum wage at £5.52 an hour is charged £2.29 for one Big Mac and would have to beg (or menace) 6 new pence or half a shilling from a passerby to make up the price of 2 Big Macs in one hour. However this only applies to minimum wage workers aged 22 years and older. For as you know and need not this article to remind you, HM Revenue & Customs applies a development rate of £4.60 per hour for workers aged 18-21 inclusive and allows £3.40 per hour for all workers under the age of 18, who are no longer of compulsory school age. This is usually taken as applying to the sort of kids you can't compulse into going to school but whose knife skills or street wisdom is not up to par for a earning a living through dealing, ducking, diving or motors.
the Big Mac PPP index page :-
http://www.economist.com/finance/displaystory.cfm?story_id=11793125
about the index http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Mac_Index
about my using the word Big Mac®™ : Big Mac®™ is a registered trade mark for a food substitute which is judging by the nutritional analysis more likely to kill Europeans & Britons than North Americans. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Mac
the UK HM R&C minimum wage page
http://www.hmrc.gov.uk/nmw/
Here's a link to "minimum wage by country" from Wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_minimum_wages_by_country
Here's an article exploring the differences in minimum wages across the states of the USA http://money.cnn.com/2008/07/24/smallbusiness/state_minimum_wages.fsb/index.htm?section=money_latest
here's the original wikinews thing which got me thinking http://en.wikinews.org/wiki/Minimum_wage_in_United_States_increases_to_%246.55
Here's a curious suggestion from the "small biz" association of the republic of Ireland who want to kick-start their economy out of recession fears by cutting the minimum wage by 1euro an hour : http://www.finfacts.ie/irishfinancenews/article_1014196.shtml
That last repulsive lobbying stance reminds us of how "minimum wage" though almost always practically set by corporations such as Walmart and Mc Donalds both at worker capitalist income and expenditure level, the benchmark so determined affects wealth perception and wealth creation aspiration by small business owners and their collective groupings worldwide.
I can't go on.
sorry.
iosaf