glassjester
Well-known member
If you say so.
I didn't.
Do you think the minimum wage should be 30 dollars per hour?
If you say so.
I didn't.
Do you think the minimum wage should be 30 dollars per hour?
Trump is a phony Christian .
A little excessive...that's why you're asking, yes?
Well wouldn't everyone live better if the minimum wage was $30?
Well wouldn't everyone live better if the minimum wage was $30?
let's say i run a lawn care service
last summer, i hired three college students in the summer at $10 an hour to cut grass, run weed-whackers and blowers, etc
bump that minimum wage up to $30/hour and what does that do to my business?
do i hire a single student and expect him to do the work that three did last year?
do i hire three students and expect my customers to pay three times as much?
let's say i run a lawn care service
last summer, i hired three college students in the summer at $10 an hour to cut grass, run weed-whackers and blowers, etc
bump that minimum wage up to $30/hour and what does that do to my business?
do i hire a single student and expect him to do the work that three did last year?
do i hire three students and expect my customers to pay three times as much?
How much were you charging for lawn care before?
enough to support my family and the costs of running the business
if i triple the cost, how am i going to cover it without passing it on to my customers?
let's assume that the majority of my cost is labor
let's assume that the majority of my cost is labor
Lets not. I don't think most people run businesses as charities.
ok, how much of my costs should i attribute to labor?
and how should i cover those increased costs when the labor cost is tripled?
Maybe half. Assuming you're a full-time manager, you have to pay labor, yourself, your gas, your equipment maintenance, and taxes.
Some combination of raising prices and cutting your own take-home.
if i cut my take-home, the business fails
how much of a price increase can i expect my customers to bear?