In reply to GameboyRMH :
An interesting theory, as personally distasteful as I find this "great men of history" sort of approach to economics, it has good logical consistency to it, but I have two issues with it - first I suspect you have some variables wrong, in that you're artificially misallocating productivity, and two if your theory IS correct, then the economy actually requires unsustainably cheap labor from people who are practically forced to do it because they're trapped in bad situations (fun point, I have actually heard a business owner openly argue that this is in fact the case, that this is just how the system works).
You are missing the sustainable cheap labor from other countries, where they are literally are trapped. Here, no one is locked in a warehouse until the end of their shift. Employers do "trap" the employees that the wish to retain by offering just enough pay and accommodations to keep them from going elsewhere. But they aren't holding them against their will. And it's only a trap if they fail to explore other opportunities. I think you are also confusing productivity and value. You can be very productive in a task that many people are willing and able to do. The end result of your labor might be valuable to the company, but if many people are willing and able to do the same job, they don't need to pay you a lot to do it. Once the business has the good or service that the employee produced, they must bring it to market. Sure, they could jack up the price and make crazy profits. Unless competition is willing to forego crazy margin percentage to capture more sales. The consumer has a big say, as they vote with their dollars. Value is what someone is willing to pay for a good or service. Your used car is only worth $25k if someone is willling and able to pay $25k for it, just like flipping burgers is only worth $20 an hour if someone is willing to pay that. How much you think it should be worth is irrelevant unless you are willing to pay for it.
Onto the first issue, I suspect flipping burgers or stacking boxes should produce enough value to support a livable wage - not necessarily sustain a family of 4 single-handed, but decently support one person or maybe two on a tight budget. This has happened in a few countries at various points throughout history, and is still happening in a few countries today, mostly in Scandinavia and Europe, and the only reason it isn't is that outside of those situations the productivity of the company's output has been misallocated onto those Few Great Men, who according to economic stats have seen their wealth explode over the last few decades while wages for the workers fall or remain stagnant at best, especially as a share of overall productivity. And what is so special about those Great Men that makes them worth so much? Is a day of high-level managerial work really worth more than a year toiling away at most any other profession? We've had CEOs make plainly disastrous decisions that lead companies into ruin (WeWork and Nokia stand out) while collecting more money than any worker could gross in a lifetime. Does being a CEO require more knowledge than being a doctor or an engineer or a full-stack web developer? I suspect not.
Define liveable wage. You can put a roof over your head and food on the table flipping burgers and stacking boxes. It won't be the nicest roof, in the nicest area, and the best food. But you can live comfortably. You might need a room mate. You might need a second job. Lots of people do this when starting out. The Scandinavia/Europe example is often cited, but more myth than accurate. There is a larger amount of redistribution, prices are higher, and overall, people live much more modestly than they do in the US. As I've stated before, the only way to make everyone more equal is to bring everyone down. The more productive people of Europe would love to have the opportunity we take for granted here. Don't forget, they also spend a fraction of what we do on their own defense, since they count on us for protection. Recent world events are changing that, and those increased defense spending dollars need to come from somewhere. You are also confusing high pay with great men. Yes, the few great men (and women) that truly move society forward are often accomplish their goals because they were perusing success. But that doesn't mean that every one with a high income is a great man. Rather, someone bet their money on that person. That new CEO was given the high salary because the complany believed there would be a return on that investment. It doesn't always work out. Just like paying a big contract to a quarterback doesn't guarantee success (looking at you, Jimmy G.) But at the time, it looked like a good decision to those that made it, they weren't trying to waste money.
Giving a few people a lot of excess wealth can do a lot of bad things to the economy, the more money you give a person the greater the percentage of that wealth will go into cash savings and investments rather than goods and labor, and the more they will spend outside the country. In short, wealth concentration takes money out of play for most of the economy, while wider-spread wealth, especially on the lower end of the economic ladder, will spread rapidly to other workers and stays local.
This is flawed. One, investment drives the economy and progress. Without investment, the best we can hope to do is to maintain the status quo. As I pointed out earlier, it's also a vehicle that allows people of modest incomes to accumulate wealth that they could not otherwise attain. Growing the economy from the bottom up is not feasible. To do so, you would need to artificially inflate the value of unskilled labor. Which would raise the costs of goods and services. Skilled labor would need to be paid more, because why would they do more specialized and valuable work for the same wage as unskilled labor? While costs are going up? All you did was increase the supply of money without increasing production. Like I said, a dog named inflation chasing it's tail.
Onto the second issue, if your theory is correct and we need some people who have no other options to work in grinding poverty or even work themselves
deeper into poverty ("Gig economy," looking at you) to keep the economy as we know it afloat, isn't that a moral failing in the system we should address? That's drifting dangerously close to indentured servitude and we know there are working alternatives.
You are assuming that it is the same people who are working in poverty from year to year throughout their lives. This is most certainly not true. People can and do work themselves out of poverty all the time- it's the rule rather than the exception- in this country at least. If you took a look at the people working in poverty in 2010, and then in 2020, a very small percentage would be on both lists. For the vast majority of people, poverty is transitional, not permanent. I do agree with you on the gig economy- I fear it will lead to more people lingering in the transitional poverty part of their lives longer, as advancement opportunity may be less frequent than with traditional employment. With the exception of those using it as supplemental income or while continuing education, then it may get them out of poverty more quickly.