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by bena
1918 days ago
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No, it is not "net value after wages". It is exactly what I said it is. It's the value the employee provides. It is not "net value - wages". And I'm saying that explicitly, it's not up for debate. The price of the item is the sum of all the value of all parties have put into the item. $15 is the sum of the values all parties invested. The employee invested $10 worth of value, the employer invested $5. But the employee is only getting compensated for $5 of that value because of a radical power imbalance. Most of China is still poor. You seem to be hung on this "better off than before" thing. And while it may be technically true, it's kind of missing the point. Something can be better than nothing and still not fair. |
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Gross value = $15/hour
Net value = $15/hour - $5/hour = $10/hour
This is an uncontroversial and standard use of "gross" and "net". Replace "employee" with anything else ("bitcoin mining rig") and you'll see what I mean.
You can define "net value" above to be the same as just plain "value", and that's fine, I believe we're talking about the same thing there.
No, it's just supply and demand, it has little to do with power.Table salt is cheap because there's an oversupply of table salt. The same with unskilled labor.
House cleaners are cheap. I'd be happy to pay them $100/hour (that's the amount of subjective value it brings me) but I only need to pay them $20/hour - and that's because of an oversupply of house cleaners. I, as an individual, have no power here. There's no power structure I am exploiting to suppress the wages of house cleaners, in fact the market is very decentralized. Power is not a significant causal factor.
Right, but they are much less poor and getting better every day because people ignored the exploitation narrative and went ahead and hired all those people on sub-$5/hour. Hopefully they keep hiring people on sub-$5/hour and continue the great work of lifting even more people out of poverty.