On August 6, 2015, Jeff Spross writes on The Week:
On the question of what to do about low wages, there are two schools of thought in American politics.
Conservatives generally oppose the minimum wage, but favorgovernment spending to top off incomes. Expanding the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) — a refundable tax break for low-income workers — is the preferred route. Liberals generally favor expanding the EITC andhiking the minimum wage, often arguing the two complement one another.
So you have potential bipartisan agreement on the EITC, and bitter divides over the minimum wage. Even Warren Buffet, a billionaire investor often admired by liberals and progressives, has thrown down for the EITC and against the minimum wage.
But Nick Hanauer, the venture capitalist and pugnacious critic of rising inequality, begs to differ. “I’m not saying we should eliminate the EITC,” Hanauer explained. But the EITC is at best an ameliorative surrender to inequality, and at worst risks perpetuating the spread of parasitic business models. “I am saying the preponderance of responsibility for living wages should and needs to fall on the shoulders of the companies that employ those workers.”
Every business is a “hub” in the economy through which money flows. Revenues come in, then expenses go out. Some of those expenses are operating costs, some are new investments in capital, some are profits paid out to shareholders, and some are wages paid to workers. Over the last three decades, those hubs have gone through a profound shift: less flowing to workers and investment, and more flowing to profits and shareholders.