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Freddie deBoer's avatar

Another basic but important point about this stuff is that when right-leaning people complain about the size of raises, they're violating their own basic philosophy on prices. When someone complains that insulin is insanely expensive, for example, the typical right rejoinder is that the price of insulin is simply what the market and underlying conditions will bear, that there is no moral component to it because it's just a reflection of amoral forces. But so is the price of labor! If the UAW can extract a 25% pay raise from the car manufacturers, that's simply what the market and underlying conditions will bear, exactly like the price of insulin. The raises are no more a reflection of the morals of the union than the price of insulin is a reflection of the morals of Eli Lilly, if we take conservative economics seriously. The cost of labor should be treated like every other cost, according to that philosophy. The only difference is that conservatives like corporations and hate unions, so they bend their own basic economic logic to indict one and not the other.

"We should have price controls for wages, but not for insulin" is a pretty good metonym for conservative morals generally.

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Paul Lukas's avatar

After college (1987), I moved to NYC and got a job as an editorial assistant at a publishing house. It paid $15,000. After six months, I was promoted to assistant editor and got a raise, to $17,680 (which is actually a lot in percentage terms, although of course that's because the original salary was so low).

After I was in the new position for about six more months, the company instituted a new series of salary guidelines. Each position was assigned a "level" (Level A, Level B, etc.), and each level had a salary range. As it turned out, the minimum, rock-bottom salary for my position's level was $17,800 — slightly more than I was making. So my boss called me in and said, "Congratulations, you're getting a raise! Your salary is now $17,800."

In other words, the company was acknowledging — according to *its own criteria,* not mine — that it had been underpaying me. But did they give me any back pay to make up for this? Of course not. And did they set my new salary above the minimum? No — in return for six months of work, I'd worked my way up to the bottom.

When I pointed all of this out to my boss, she said I was being an ingrate and that she'd have to put a note about it in my file.

I was happy to get out of publishing and get into a more lucrative industry like, uh, journalism....

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