I actually disagree with this... though I haven't dove into the economics of either of these with any kind of uber-analysis.Desert wrote: Decent article by Warren Buffett, claiming that an Earned Income Tax Credit would be better than raising the min wage. My opinion is that the first step should be elimination of the regressive FICA tax for low wage earners. I always prefer a tax break for the poor rather than credits, if possible.
http://www.wsj.com/articles/better-than ... 1432249927The remedy usually proposed for this mismatch is education. Indeed, a top-notch school system available to all is hugely important. But even with the finest educational system in the world, a significant portion of the population will continue, in a nation of great abundance, to earn no more than a bare subsistence.
To see why that is true, imagine we lived in a sports-based economy. In such a marketplace, I would be a flop. You could supply me with the world’s best instruction, and I could endlessly strive to improve my skills. But, alas, on the gridiron or basketball court I would never command even a minimum wage. The brutal truth is that an advanced economic system, whether it be geared to physical or mental skills, will leave a great many people behind.
The EITC phases out over income... which is a HUGE part of the problem of our current government help for the lower classes, IMO... Rather than being a given level of broad-based support, it is a carrot that goes away as your income grows. The "effective marginal tax rate" of poor folks is actually alarmingly high when you take into consideration all the benefit they lose as they earn more income.
A minimum wage hike raises the floor on an hour of work for everyone. While the economics of this are double-sided in some ways, it at least raises the general floor, and therefore raises the steps above that, as well. There's far-less of a moral hazard with a minimum wage hike than creating yet another disappearing program for poor folks trying to not be poor, anymore.
This is moda's "quick take." I've hardly taken any of this to a spreadsheet or have any sources of deep analysis. I'm just combining what I think I tend to know about 1) minimum wage economics, and 2) the economics of our disappearing-as-you-earn-more safety-net programs.
If he'd advocated for a citizen's dividend, then we'd be talking!

