pkefal said:
Do be honest, I don't understand how you "drive the wages down" when the employer is obliged to pay at least the median wage of the province. If the argument is that "if they didn't have to pay the median wage on an TFW, then the wages will increase for the Canadians" then you might be right, but that won't change how much goes into your pocket even if you accepted to work for the median wage.
Inflation causes the price of things to rise. Gas costs more than it did 20 years ago. Housing costs way more than it did 20 years ago. Food, electricity, and many other basics cost more than they did 20 years ago. And yet Canadian wages have been, on average, stagnant. Wages have stayed the same while the cost of everything went up. Stagnant wages are, in effect, a cut. They lower your standard of living. Wages must always rise for Canadians to keep pace with inflation.
That isn't happening in Canada. The poor are getting poorer, the rich are getting richer (top 5%) and the people in the middle are staying the same. http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/middle-class-stagnant-rich-and-poor-increasing-in-numbers-1.703237
The TFW program, until last year, allowed employers to pay 15% less. Now there is a new rule that says they have to pay equal wages (but that rule has never been enforced). If a position is "in demand" then it needs to be made more attractive. Maybe no one wants to flip burgers for $10. So that means pay them more, it does not mean import foreigners and pay them $10 (while deducting exhoritant rent from their pay check and refusing to pay overtime so really they only make $6.) The abuse makes the program especially damaging, and that is why I focus on fixing the abuse of the program the most. But even a very low amount of abuse would work to keep wages of Canadians low.
If the median is $100 and the high is $200, if you push the wage towards the highs, that will increase labor cost and eventually increase the product cost (e.g. food, services, you name it). You'll have to spend more to have the same goods, which will, in its majority, reduce the effect of the increased wages. Also, your taxes will increase as your income increases.
The prices go up anyway. Thats how the top 5% keep getting richer and richer and richer while everyone else stays the same or gets poorer.
Corporations in Canada have been making record profits by raising prices while keeping wages stagnant. And by the way, a Big Mac from MacDonalds in Fort Mac
costs the same as a Big mac in Toronto, despite the Fort Mac workers makeing way high wages. It's a myth that corporations will always raise prices if they raise wages. In fact, the price of a product is based on many factors, and the wages of the people who produce it is only one small part of that.
I also don't buy it that there aren't Canadians to do the work at Mcdonald's. They might not like the wage and the nature of the job, but that's how it is, either take it, or leave it.
Theres lots of Canadians who would love that job if it paid decently. Actually,when i was in high school i applied at MacDonalds and they turned me down. I would have loved working there but was not given the chance.
Regardless, why in the world would MacDonalds even dream of paying more money when they can import foreigners for cheap? Why? No one who supports the TFW program can explain to me how MacDonalds (or any other corporation) will ever get around to raiseing wages, if they can just keep importing cheap foreigners?
And if they are not raising wages, then you are losing because the price of everything else is always going up up up.
I already showed the example where it is required for a strong economy that employers raise wages when they have trouble finding workers. Circumventing that destroys the economy. See my example a few posts above.