How Much is a Living Wage? | Meet the Press Reports

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  • Опубліковано 15 лип 2023
  • A rise in the cost of living and stagnant wages affect voter attitudes and political preferences.
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    #Wages #Economy #Inflation

КОМЕНТАРІ • 2,5 тис.

  • @andrewheffel3565

    I don't know what the answer is, but something is very wrong. I am old. When I got a full time job as a grocery clerk in the early 1970's, I made enough to live happily without debt. I bought a decent used car, rented a clean apartment, ate ok, bought a six pack of Bud and a chuck steak on Fridays, and paid my bills on time. More importantly, in two years I was able to save a downpayment for a small house in Ventura, CA where I lived.

  • @primordialbeing

    it’s beyond inhumane how unserious we have been to address such gaping inequality. To think so many have so much and yet many have barely anything to get by.

  • @Gaming_Antics

    A living wage should:

  • @Sasha32659

    I used to think $15 was the magic number but as long as landlords can raise the rent as high as they want, whenever they want, quality of life will suffer.

  • @meatrocket4830

    When owners starts talking about how "this company is like a family" run as far & fast as you can. They will without question try to manipulate & take advantage of you eventually. You are there to exchange your time & labor for money. Never let them manipulate you into thinking otherwise. This doesn't mean be rude or disrespectful to your employers. Build as many bridges & advantageous relationships as possible. But never forget your individual value as a human being & do not let yourself be taken advantage of. Employers take advantage of people's desperation when they say they can't pay you a livable wage. They are nothing without your labor. If they can't pay employees a livable wage then they are prioritizing the companies expansion & the growth over their workers. If they can't pay a livable wage then they shouldn't have so many employees.

  • @Kiriesani
    @Kiriesani  +187

    As someone who can't work for more than $10,000 a year without losing state insurance this issue is extremely underrepresented. There's so many poverty traps in this country. I have medical and mental issues but there's no step up program I can work towards. If I make too much, I lose it all. I make

  • @joeymcguire8742

    My dad worked full time in a warehouse that paid enough for him to buy a house, a car, and cash for his trade school at 25. By the time he was my age, he made as much money as I do now, but 30 years later and I’m smarter, more educated, and more capable in 90% of everything. There are aspects of his job that I can do despite never having directly studied or worked in his industry. Somehow, I’m unqualified to make a decent living and my retirement is on pace to be in my 80s.

  • @NHSSHINOBI

    I agree with Tamica's sentiments. The system has a flaw where if your income surpasses a specific threshold, your benefits are taken away. Furthermore, the state considers the income of other individuals living in your household, even if they don't contribute any money. This practice can inadvertently push you over the threshold, leading to the loss of your benefits.

  • @al_chargedup

    The prices of grocery goes up every time I go to buy food. The companies make billions in profits every year yet claim they need to raise prices because of inflation.

  • @RussellNorris-jo7bi

    The truth is it's not just education and good jobs that have been lost over the years it's paid apprenticeships unions and not having a living wage in the country as well as the high cost of everything.

  • @Dadsworld_

    I remember working minimum wage jobs, I feel for everyone that is stuck there still.

  • @littlewing5682

    A lot of places won’t hire you full time either. I was told at my interview 15-20 hours per week. That quickly turned into 37.5 hours a week (which is fine, I like to work but 2.5 hours away from full time so they don’t have to give benefits is crazy to me)

  • @asiam1528

    In Florida it’s horrible one bedroom is 2000 dollars and the minimum wage is low 😑

  • @Siskos-pn7nd

    Who should we blame for this problem? Who can solve it? Who are the ones who raise the price of things you buy, goods or services? Who decides how much labor is paid? The bosses, the billionaires who own the multinationals corporation, make these decisions. Yet, we blame "Biden" or who ever is in office. The billionaire class controls our government, all 3 branches and the media companies. Yet, rarely do Americans blame those who decide what we get paid and what we pay for what we need.

  • @virginiamoss7045

    In my college town a married young woman with 3 kids and a husband in prison started receiving government assistance; to get it she had to either be working or going to school. She went to school to get certified to be a hospital worker; I don't remember what kind. She worked hard and graduated with new hope, did a job search and got an good offer at the local hospital. The amount of income was not enough for her to take the job without the government assistance, so she had to decline the offer that just put her over the line to lose her benefits. She was forced to continue her benefits by working a low-wage job, wondering why she made the effort to learn all she had learned. Hopeless. And a continuing burden on the taxpayer. The whole reason for the rules was to get people off welfare.

  • @Isaac-ul8yz

    Living wage is more than just being able to afford all the important bills. It’s about being comfortable and having the freedom to grow and to have some fun too.

  • @HansJohnsonStudios

    We need more in-depth reporting like this on the major news networks.

  • @glitchy9437

    Getting by is NOT A LIVING WAGE!

  • @jermainemyrn19

    Corporations having deregulation is the problem. Reagan letting corporations reign supreme ended up being the obvious bad idea that it was

  • @nathanmiddleton1478

    The man with the "print shop" saying people used to work 80 hours a week for nothing and that was "okay" is just insane. We know their quality of life, from his own statement, was terrible, their mental health would've been shot, and that would've all been passed on to their children. Why did the successive generations fights for a 40 hour work week, minimum wage guarantees, etc?