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Old November 8th 03, 05:21 PM
Dee D. Flint
 
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"N2EY" wrote in message
...
In article , "Dee D.

Flint"
writes:

"Ryan, KC8PMX" wrote in message
...

The
average wage around here, what is considered the alleged "living" or

minimum
wage is between $5.25-6.00 per hour.


Keep in mind that the minimum wage was NEVER intended to be a "living"

wage.

It wasn't? I'd be interested in a reference on that.

I think what we're really seeing is inflation outpacing the minimum wage.

Fun fact: In 1976 I started a job as a degreed engineer at the princely

sum of
about $12,000/yr - about $6 an hour. About minimum wage today, but back

then
the prices of most things (particularly housing and transportation) was so

much
lower that it was a lot of money - to me, anyway.

73 de Jim, N2EY


And at that time minimum wage was about $1.50 per hour. It wasn't a living
wage then either. Entry level jobs have never provided the income to
support a family. Anyone that I have ever known in my lifetime (52 years)
that made minimum wage either lived with their parents or other relatives, a
group of roommates, or had a working spouse even back when I was a child.
No adult male that I knew stayed in a minimum wage job any longer than it
took to find something else because they could not pay groc, rent, and
transportation on that. It has never been high enough to do so.

Wages versus costs is all relative. You have to look at how many hours it
takes to buy something. The majority of items but not all take fewer hours
of work to purchase than they did in 1976. The cost of electronics is down
in terms of hours to buy. The cost of houses is about the same in terms of
hours.

Dee D. Flint, N8UZE