So Lennis, am I to take it that yours is a "No" answer? Just wondering.
There is no way you can abolish the minimum wage in this country.
I wasn't asking if it was possible to abolish it or not. I asked if we "should" abolish it.
Now for your other points.
You talked about America’s citizenry, especially middle-aged would the most affected by abolishing the minimum wage. Research has been done in this area. A 1999 survey of small businesses by the Jerome Levy Economics Institute shows that raising the minimum wage would cause more than 20 percent of small-business owners to reconsider their employment decisions. Also, the Congressional Budget Office estimates the potential job losses associated with an increase in the minimum wage at roughly 200,000 to 600,000 jobs.
Imagine, if you will, restaurant employment. A manager might have $10,000 in her monthly budget to hire bus personnel. If the wage is set at $8 per hour, the manager may only be able to hire 10 bus people instead of 15.
Setting a mandated wage limit disrupts market forces of supply and demand. Just because there is no minimum wage doesn't mean companies can pay whatever they want. Would you work a dishwashing job that paid 25 cents per hour? Would anyone? If they raised the wage to $4 per hour, they might be able to hire a high school student. Consider some highly skilled jobs such as accountant, lawyer, and engineer. Do these people make $5.15 an hour? Obviously, the answer is no. Market factors of supply and demand determine how many jobs are available and what each job would pay. In summary, as the minimum wage goes up, the number of people employed goes down. When the minimum wage goes down, the number of people employed goes up. Keep in mind: the minimum wage only applies if someone is employed.
When you mentioned youth, I presume you meant teenagers or at least people less than 21 years of age. Youth is an umbrella term to describe the “under 21” work force in America. You also have to include workers-in-training, college students, interns, and part-time workers as well. I could argue that increasing the federal minimum wage would actually hurt the collective group of workers I have just mentioned, which brings me to another point that I neglected to include in the Pros and Cons area of my introduction, which is this:
Teenagers, workers in training, college students, interns, and part-time workers all have their options and opportunities limited by the minimum wage.
A vast majority of minimum wage jobs are taken by the groups named above. It is true that you cannot make a living and support a family on a minimum wage job. These jobs are typically positions requiring little or no training that can be filled by almost anyone. Many students, part-timers, and other young workers are willing to take much less than minimum wage, especially if it is a fun or educational job. For example, I am (for real) looking toward a prospect of becoming an intern at the Walt Disney Company as a way to break into the film industry, and I am hoping to do it on my hard-earned savings and not because of a government-mandated wage floor.
Having a paying job when you're young helps to teach values such as discipline, hard work, and responsibility. It teaches young workers how to handle money and deal with other people. Thus, as a society, we want to maximize the number of young people that work, even if it's for small wages. In fact, earning low wages provides extra motivation to go to college or acquire advanced job skills by some other method. Raising the minimum wage to $7 or more will definitely help some people trying to support a family, but it will hurt the group that holds almost all minimum wage positions. It will simply mean fewer low-skill jobs for those that actually need them. In some cases, however, this downside can be minimized by applying a multiple-wage structure, allowing a lower minimum wage if you fit into one of these groups.
More to come when time allows...