They are keeping their wages low by avoiding mandatory pay rises that come with statutory overtime.
So to reiterate: they offer low wages, and their actions are consistent with that objective.
Yet the workers all chose to work there, implying it was better than the next best option available to them. For the employees, they are better off for that employer offering the employment, than not doing so.
So my point stands. You seem to not have even addressed it, and instead made an appeal to emotion by repeatedly referencing the low pay the employer insisted on providing.
>>How about not establishing regular schedules published in a timely manner?
This is the only potentially abusive and fraudulent practice you cited, and I would support class-action litigation to punish employers who engage in it, and publicly funded advocates and watchdogs to assist low-wage workers who find themselves facing these kinds of practices.
The argument that low-pay jobs - that those working them willingly accepted - is by definition exploitation is, OTOH, an economic fallacy that misattributes the cause of low-pay and promotes regulatory restrictions on contract liberty that gravely harm society.
> Yet the workers all chose to work there, implying it was better than the next best option available to them.
That's not how minimum-wage labor effectively works. The workers (many of whom have just entered the workforce, myself included at the time) apply for all the available jobs in their area and hope that at least one hires them.
At that level, the employers are in a race to the bottom, and rather than attempting to be a better choice to attract and support their labor force, their reliance on the workers' desperation means they all push the limits to see how much they can get out of workers for how little in return. It's the entire reason we even have minimum wage laws.
And they all do it. There's nothing particularly noteworthy about any given employer. I saw the same behavior, through my siblings' experience, at four different mega-franchisers.
> For the employees, they are better off for that employer offering the employment, than not doing so.
So, no. The employees aren't any better off being exploited by any given employer, when their only other choice is unemployment or identical exploitation by another employer.
>>The workers (many of whom have just entered the workforce, myself included at the time) apply for all the available jobs in their area and hope that at least one hires them
The workers could work for themselves, hawking products on the sidewalk, or going door-to-door offering to do odd jobs.
The jobs being offered provide a better path forward for them, which is why they apply for them rather than being self-employed.
>>their reliance on the workers' desperation means they all push the limits to see how much they can get out of workers for how little in return.
All employers try to maximize how much they get for what they pay. The wage level makes no difference to the employers' basic objective.
But what the employer offers has to be worth more to the worker than what the worker gives up, or the worker won't work for them. There is no exception to this fact in any mutually agreed employment contract.
>>There's nothing particularly noteworthy about any given employer.
You said they're in a race to the bottom, so there must be differences between them.
So to reiterate: they offer low wages, and their actions are consistent with that objective.
Yet the workers all chose to work there, implying it was better than the next best option available to them. For the employees, they are better off for that employer offering the employment, than not doing so.
So my point stands. You seem to not have even addressed it, and instead made an appeal to emotion by repeatedly referencing the low pay the employer insisted on providing.
>>How about not establishing regular schedules published in a timely manner?
This is the only potentially abusive and fraudulent practice you cited, and I would support class-action litigation to punish employers who engage in it, and publicly funded advocates and watchdogs to assist low-wage workers who find themselves facing these kinds of practices.
The argument that low-pay jobs - that those working them willingly accepted - is by definition exploitation is, OTOH, an economic fallacy that misattributes the cause of low-pay and promotes regulatory restrictions on contract liberty that gravely harm society.