potroastV2
Well-Known Member
Ohhhh, that question is TOO hard!
gotta keep it simpleOhhhh, that question is TOO hard!
Plenty of gas stations go out of business.We see different prices at gas stations across the street from one another yet the nickel or so higher price doesn't drive that station out of business. Why do you think he doesn't go out of business?
You didn't stay on topic. Not surprising. So I'll ask the question again. How can two gas stations, practically side by side to each other both manage to stay in business when one charges more than the other? There are plenty of examples of this.Plenty of gas stations go out of business.
Not enough data to answer the question. Do you deny that price is a factor in people's purchasing decisions? Sometimes the primary factor?You didn't stay on topic. Not surprising. So I'll ask the question again. How can two gas stations, practically side by side to each other both manage to stay in business when one charges more than the other? There are plenty of examples of this.
thank you Tesla....Plenty of gas stations go out of business.
could be answered by your reply:So what happens when the gas station down the street gets all the business because his prices are cheaper?
I absolutely do deny that price is the deciding factor in people's choice. For most people, cost is not the deciding factor in consumer choice. Quality, reliability, dependability, cost of ownership, prior relationships all play a role. The consumer dictates where his money goes and that's what differentiates one product or place of business from another.Not enough data to answer the question. Do you deny that price is a factor in people's purchasing decisions? Sometimes the primary factor?
You can start a business and pay people whatever you want, I dont care. It is when you start dictating what other business owners have to do that I object.
When the government forces a wage increase there is a wage increase? Fascinating....So far, the Seattle minimum-wage increase is doing what it’s supposed to do
What happens when a study shows that a minimum-wage increase is simply having its intended effect? When it’s found to raise the pay of low-wage workers without causing much in the way of the job displacements that critics rail about? Unfortunately, one thing that apparently happens is the findings get misinterpreted (though, as I’ll show, this is partly due to the omission of key statistical information).
The study to which I’m referring examines the impact of the first stage of the minimum-wage increase in Seattle. In April 2015, the city raised its minimum wage from around $9.50 to $11, on the way to $15 an hour by 2017 (for employers with 500 or more employees and certain other employers; the minimum wage for most Seattle businesses rose to $10 in April 2015, and $15 will not go into effect for all Seattle businesses until 2021). The pay of affected workers went up almost 12 percent, compared to a 5 percent increase for workers in nearby, similar places that weren’t bound by the increase. The study’s authors concluded that the increase raised the pay of affected workers by seven percentage points more than might otherwise have occurred.
Cheaper beer this one guy has it down he gets plenty business and the only thing going for him is cheap beer and cigarettes plus he does cash peoples checks for free. The store across the street is a lot nicer but I would not buy anything but gas from them.We see different prices at gas stations across the street from one another yet the nickel or so higher price doesn't drive that station out of business. Why do you think he doesn't go out of business?
"The pay of affected workers went up almost 12 percent, compared to a 5 percent increase for workers in nearby, similar places that weren’t bound by the increase. The study’s authors concluded that the increase raised the pay of affected workers by seven percentage points more than might otherwise have occurred."When the government forces a wage increase there is a wage increase? Fascinating....
I read that today, interesting study. I'm sure it will be replicated elsewhere in its design, but we'll see. Kinda seems like the fight for 15 has a big hill to climb now tho. Not that folks werent saying this would happen before Seattle went and did it. But what do business owners know?Whelp, let me be the first to post this in the absence not regretted of NLX
A ‘very credible’ new study on Seattle’s $15 minimum wage has bad news for liberals
On the whole, the study estimates, the average low-wage worker in the city lost $125 a month because of the hike in the minimum.
The paper's conclusions contradict years of research on the minimum wage. Many past studies, by contrast, have found that the benefits of increases for low-wage workers exceed the costs in terms of reduced employment -- often by a factor of four or five to one.
business owner here.I read that today, interesting study. I'm sure it will be replicated elsewhere in its design, but we'll see. Kinda seems like the fight for 15 has a big hill to climb now tho. Not that folks werent saying this would happen before Seattle went and did it. But what do business owners know?
Stopped reading right there. That's a shit site run by the same people that run Info Wars.According to Truth Revolt