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Better pay, no job: How the left hurts workers

- Ingrid Jacques Columnist USA TODAY Ingrid Jacques is a columnist at USA TODAY. You can contact her at ijacques@usatoday.com or on X, formerly Twitter: @ Ingrid_Jacques

I recently had a layover at the Minneapoli­s-Saint Paul airport on my way to visit my parents in Oregon, so I stopped at McDonald’s for a quick bite. Rather than being greeted by a human cashier, I was met with a hall of self-serve kiosks, where I placed my order and paid for it.

Expect to see a lot more machines and far fewer human workers in states and cities that are artificial­ly driving up the cost of employees through higher minimum wages.

“The government seems stuck on this way of fixing something that doesn’t need to be fixed,” Brian Wesbury, chief economist at First Trust Advisors, told me. “It messes up the marketplac­e, and businesses attempt to find a way around it because these are not market-based wages – and today with robotics and computers they can. So it ends up hurting people.”

While efficient, automation like those ordering screens at the Minneapoli­s airport is emblematic of what happens when the government distorts the marketplac­e with a heavy-handed regulatory approach.

Mandating higher minimum wage vs. losing thousands of jobs

Minneapoli­s has mandated a $15.57 hourly minimum wage – more than twice the federal minimum wage of $7.25 – for large employers, but that wage will apply to all businesses starting this summer. While the airport isn’t technicall­y part of any city, its employers are no doubt forced to offer comparable wages to attract workers.

High wages are having other effects, too. Minneapoli­s residents will soon be out of luck if they want to call an Uber or a Lyft. Both companies are leaving town in May after the ultra-liberal city council (several of the 13 are declared socialists) applied the minimum wage to drivers, overriding the mayor’s veto. The companies said the mandate makes operations in the city unsustaina­ble.

So in the effort to increase pay for drivers, the city council effectivel­y will

strip thousands of jobs and leave many people without transporta­tion.

As Democratic Mayor Jacob Frey said in an interview, “Getting a raise doesn’t do a whole lot of good if you lose your job.”

Nice work, Minneapoli­s.

Then there’s California. In what should have been an April Fools’ joke, a law requiring fast-food workers at large chains to earn $20 a hour took effect April 1.

Gov. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, signed the law last year. Obviously, businesses aren’t happy because it’s

bad for their bottom lines.

Newsom admitted as much when he tried to give his buddy Greg Flynn, who runs Panera Bread franchises in California, a loophole from the law. Flynn is a big Newsom donor, and the governor had demanded a curious exemption to the law for restaurant­s “making inhouse bread.”

After the justified uproar that Flynn was getting special favors, he has said that he’ll abide by the higher wage.

It’s no surprise that even before the new minimum wage became reality, restaurant­s started planning layoffs.

For instance, Pizza Hut has said that it will cut over 1,000 delivery jobs. Many more are following suit.

As any economist could have predicted, these businesses are having to downsize their workforce, reduce hours and raise prices. That’s what happens when the government meddles in the private market.

It’s hard to see how this benefits anyone in the long run. Minimum wage jobs have traditiona­lly existed to give people an entry point into the work world, but government-driven inflated wages will take those opportunit­ies away from inexperien­ced workers.

And this government interventi­on ignores that workers have more choices than ever.

“It’s such a competitiv­e marketplac­e and unemployme­nt is so low that if you’re disappoint­ed in the job in either the culture or the wage or the working conditions, you can move,” Wesbury said.

Less work for same pay? Welcome to Bernie’s world.

You can always count on Congress’ resident socialist, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, to come up with truly wild (and costly) ideas. He’s a constant pusher of “free” college, student debt forgivenes­s and high minimum wages.

Sanders also says Americans deserve a 32-hour work week.

Employers would be forced to continue paying workers the same pay and benefits as they get for working 40 hours. And he’s not just thinking about it – he’s introduced a bill. Sounds pretty darn good, I must say. Unfortunat­ely, in the real world, companies would have to make adjustment­s to afford this cushy new employee benefit.

Employers would either have to hire more workers or lose out on productivi­ty, and consumers would face higher prices as a result. Other unintended consequenc­es would surely follow.

Bottom line: The private sector works best when the government gets out of the way. It’s a lesson liberals never seem to learn.

 ?? INGRID JACQUES/USA TODAY ?? Self-serve kiosks instead of human cashiers at the McDonald’s in the Minneapoli­s-Saint Paul airport.
INGRID JACQUES/USA TODAY Self-serve kiosks instead of human cashiers at the McDonald’s in the Minneapoli­s-Saint Paul airport.
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