BadFish
Huge Member
- Oct 19, 2003
- 18,222
WZ has answered your second question. As to your first, they've always banged on about introducing and raising the minimum wage as being inflationary. It hasn't been thus far.
Hiking it up really quickly would do that though. The logic is quite simple: you increase wages by that amount, you're basically pumping extra money into the economy. But you're not immediately increasing the goods, services, etc on sale. That means there's more money chasing a static range of goods, which induces price increases, hence inflation.
I too am an economics numpty but theoretically does this mean that if a company acan find away to increase wages by cutting costs elsewhere then inflation remains unaffected?
My thinking here is the gap between CEO salary and worker wages. Obviously not so relevant for smaller companies but surely if this gap was closed in larger companies it means more cash on the hips for more workers, this means more money going back into the economy so the smaller companies can increase wages too?
Is it as simple as trying to redirect the money that is sitting in the Cayman islands etc back into the economy through the workers?