If employers don’t pay a living wage to their employees, I have to make up the rest as a taxpayer through welfare.
Screw that. I shouldn’t have to subsidize the employer.
I don't think your argument works out. Right now there are a lot of people whose wages, going by the market, are not up to scratch. They don't get full-time hours because their labour is fungible and cheap. I'm thinking Uber drivers, waiters and the like. Some in these jobs are very good at them and they make easily over a living wage (great). Some are not very good, get inconsistent shifts, and struggle.
Now, if every employer (say every restaurant that employs waiters, or every agency that employs cleaners) had to give even the least capable and shitty employees a "living wage", two things would happen. Either the average wage for bottom-end jobs would increase significantly, thus leading to inflation. Or employers would fire all the people who they think aren't worth the new 'living wage', thus leading to a higher welfare bill.
You're better off allowing the labor market to price itself. It leads to not very great outcomes for those at the bottom of the distribution, but it rarely leads to starvation. And it also keeps prices low.
They can be fired. Employers are under no obligation to keep shitty employees. Especially when the unemployment rate is so low.
My position stands. If we had always allowed "the market" to make the choices, people would be working seven days a week, twelve hours a day. Children would be working those hours, too. There would be no such thing as overtime. Employers will do whatever they can to make a profit at the expense of their employees. If they can't pay a decent wage for their employees, we as taxpayers should not have to subsidize their bad business model.
The unemployment rate is low because the cost of labour is low. If we followed your proposal and raised the minimum wage to a living wage, and then just paid welfare to all the people fired as a result, we would:
- Be paying a lot more welfare to a lot more unemployed people (Group A)
- Simultaneously, have a lot of people suddenly earning more than they did before, meaning a rise in the cost of low-end goods and services (Group B)
Sure, if you move enough Group B people off welfare to counterbalance Group A people moved onto welfare, your total "welfare" budget might not increase. But you're still a lot worse off, because suddenly inflation hits every single person by diminishing consuming power.
I'd rather fix problems with welfare than inflation. Because at the end of the day welfare is unpalatable and encourages people to take on unpleasant jobs so that they can still have some semblance of a wage. If we just gave all jobs such a wage, people would no longer take on unpleasant jobs, and the cost of said jobs would go up, and we'd all have to pay more money as a result.