Quote from tomdavis:
The minimum wage proposal is based on an economic model. But there's just one problem.
Economic models often fail because they're bound by assumptions that don't measure "unintended consequences."
Here's a classic example:
When a good idea isn't such a good idea
In the late 1980s the idea of a âluxury taxâ on yachts had 80% support from the public. College professors all across America clamored for the tax, claiming their economic models showed it would raise tens of millions in tax revenues while making the rich pay their "fair share." A few brave souls dared to mention the problem of âunintended consequences,â but they were quickly shouted down.
Under sustained public pressure, Congress enacted the luxury tax in the fall of 1990. But what seemed like a good idea at the time quickly turned into an economic nightmare when people simply stopped buying boats.
The yachting industry tumbled into an irreversible decline. American boat sales fell by half. Over 35,000 middle-class boat-building workers, sales people, administrative staff and managers lost their jobs. Over 50,000 people who worked for companies that supplied yacht parts and raw materials also found themselves in the unemployment lines. Factories that had been filled with American workers manufacturing high-quality products were suddenly empty. In less than two years, the luxury tax on yachts destroyed tens of thousands of middle-class jobs.
Adding insult to injury, the luxury tax also resulted in a net loss to the US Treasury. In other words, the lost income taxes from the workers and boat businesses plus the cost of unemployment benefits paid by the government was tens of millions of dollars more than the amount of luxury tax collected.
In 1993 the luxury tax was repealed by Congress, but not before the damage had been done. Almost a hundred thousand jobs were lost and scores of boating businesses were bankrupt or irreparably damaged.