Well over $100k in the higher cost of living states, too. And as the article states, that’s typically about double what the median salary is for a single person in most states.

I’d like to point out that AES states - while maybe they didn’t have all the same quality or quantity of consumer goods - were able to able to to provide a comfortable life for everyone without all the predatory that US workers currently have. And don’t take my word for it, take it from the neoliberal queen herself, Angela Merkel. When asked about life in the former GDR, she described it as “almost comfortable”. Now before you mention that “almost” is an important qualifier, note that the context of her quote was her trying to criticize the former GDR but she grudgingly conceded the comment above.

  • Maoo [none/use name]
    ·
    3 months ago

    Precisely minimum wage, yes.

    I bet if you tweak it just a little you'll get a dramatically larger percentage: below $8/hour.

    This will include three new groups:

    1. People that work minimum wage but got their mandated $0.10 wage increase or got a job that at least wants to be able to claim it's not minimum wage on paper. I remember being stoked for getting a $0.50 raise above minimum wage at one point... got way fewer overdraft fees that way.

    2. People who are exempted like tipped workers. The finances of this are fucked, with people doing constant math on what they should and shouldn't report to the feds, but at the end of the day these people are not paid above minimum wage by their employers.

    3. The economic underclass paid under the table at or below minimum wage (they wouldn't show up in these statistical sources either way).