McDonalds has a employee "McResource" line dedicated to encouraging and assisting its employees, including full timers, to utilize public assistance, including welfare and food stamps. It employees get over $7 billion every year in such public assistance. Full time wages are at about $18,000 per year, which is below the poverty line.
But how many of their employees are full time?
70% of their employees are over 20 years old, and 40% are over 25, and 34% have kids. For most of these people, this is their only job and 1 in 3 have kids. If they are less than "full time" it is mostly against their will and forced on them by the company because that allows the company to not give them benefits and keeps the employees below income levels where public assistance picks up the remaining cost of a living wage. 7.5 million workers are part-time because their employer won't offer them more hours, most of these are in min wage jobs like fast food, and most of the time its because the employer uses part-time as a cost-cutting strategy. IOW, most McDonalds employees are either full time or want to be full time, yet full time pay would still land them on public assistance. Because so many companies use this strategy of only offering part-time work, these workers have no choice. Even most of those that are "willingly" part-time, it is only because their pay is so low that it is less than the cost of child-care. IOW, they are forced to "choose" part time because of their low hourly wage.
And $18k is well above the poverty line for one person.
$18k was overly generous on my part. It presumes 40 hour weeks at $9 per hour. The Fed minimum is only $7.25 and the State minimums are often below that, as low as $5.15, plus "full-time" is actually only 30 hours according to ACA. Employees making the current Fed min and working less than 34 hours are below the poverty line of $12,000, even for a single individual.
IOW, a large % of their employees that are full time are either below or just barely above the poverty line for a single individual. And over 1/3 have children they are supporting. Most of these are getting public assistance, and McDonald's aggressively promotes use of public assistance among its employees.
It does this because that is a way they can externalize their own costs onto the taxpayers, which is one of the primary sources of corporate profits. They cannot maintain employees that don't have sufficient resources to feed, clothe, and house themselves. Thus, they need their employees to be at a minimal level of resources, yet they don't want to pay that level. So, they deliberately pay them little enough so that they qualify for public assistance and let the taxpayers pay the rest. This strategy goes into both their hourly pay levels an into restricting hours they allow employees to work to ensure that they stay below levels that make them eligible for public assistance programs.
If you have multiple people in the household why don't you have two earners??
Because the others in the household are usually children, and even with a second parent, a second earner leads to a net loss in income if that job is below $10 per hour, due to childcare costs being higher than that. IOW, in many millions of 2 parent homes, they would be even poorer if both parent were employed rather than 1.
If you put the wages high enough that people with short hours have enough money then you'll drive them so high that it will be only robots doing the work.
We should be aiming to increase the hours worked rather than the current system that actually encourages part time work.
The only way to increase hours is by force of law. Force companies to offer full time hours to all employees. So, do you support such laws? If not, how do you propose to impact companies like McDonald's that refuse to offer most of their employees more hours because they profit when their employees are on public assistance due to part time employment?
What is needed is too harshly penalize all companies that make large profits without hiring employees that are paid above public assistance levels.
This can be done by setting a much higher corporate tax rate,combined with tax reductions for each employees they have that is paid above a set minimum, by any combination of hours below 40 per week and hourly wage. It fosters incentive to pay employees more while also hiring more employees by having each one work less than 40 hours but for still enough pay to be above public assistance levels. It disincentivises trying to increase profits by either replacing or underpaying employees.
For example, a company has 10 employees producing X widgets. A tech advancement allow them to produce X widgets in less time. The company still has X widgets it will sell for the same revenue. Currently, they will take the opportunity to increase the profits for those at the top by fucking over their employees, either by firing some or by cutting all their hours and their total wages. Either way, taxpayers pick up the cost., The proper tax levels and breaks would incentivize the company to keep all 10 employees at the same total pay, and either reduce hours for that same pay or find some other task they can perform for those hours saved by the tech.
Of course no politician would do that because it would raise the unemployment rate
We need to attack to empty discourse that emphasizes unemployment, and shift to % of people not earning a wage above levels that disqualify them for public assistance. That includes the traditionally unemployed, and both part timers and full timers whose combination of hours and hourly wage falls below public assistance maximums. That is the number that matters. That is the # that reflects a healthy economy rather than one where some reap at the direct expense of others suffering. That is the number that must be minimized in sustainable just society in which their is a less dangerously unequal distribution of available work, the benefits produced by work, and the benefits to quality of life from advances in human knowledge (most of which arise from collective and publically supported efforts rather than individual achievements).