This is a short article that investigates why certain roofers are calling for additional H2B permissions to import cheap labor.
The article is kinda funny.
I liked this part:
"Usually we try to aim for 40 percent profit margin."
The average grocery store has a profit margin of about 1-3%
I know a few government contractors in the aerospace industry (guidance computers, software, for planes, drones) that are around 7%.
Insurance companies are around 5-7% profit margin.
(Big) Banks have huge profit margins in the double digits, like 20%.
Construction companies are usually pretty low, less than 10%.
Maybe it's a typo? Maybe it was supposed to be 4%.
The way that capitalism is SUPPOSED to work
Although it's been subverted over the years to be seen as a "system," it's not, and there is no way it's "supposed" to work.
"Capitalism" was more a philosophical attempt to categorize and quantify certain natural human behaviors, "rights."
No different than "psychology" or "sociology."
Human beings have a natural tendency to view things as private property. That's my knife. That's my foot. That's my baby.
"Capitalism" is a term for the natural occurrence of a bartering system of private property and freely chosen labor.
One person has private property, or they freely choose to work for another.
They exchange for something that fulfills self interest. Tools, labor, whatever, in exchange for other private property that someone else has, instead of resorting to war or murder or because a king threatened them.
There isn't a "SUPPOSED" to work, there's just what happens.
That's why it's not a "system."
A "system" is a top down chosen ideological enforcement. "I/we own all production methods, you may have what we/I dictate you to have, and you have to like it, because god told me so, now it's the law of the land, live it, love it, this is how we're going to behave, this is our constitution, here's our police force to enforce it."
"Capitalism" is based on human nature. "This is my knife. I made it. I could kill you and take your stuff. But then your friends would come kill me and take my stuff. Instead I will let you use it to kill that buffalo, or help you, if you give me 20 lbs of meat."
That freely entered transaction of goods and/or labor for mutual benefit towards self interest is "capitalism."
There may be a "SUPPOSED" to work in an artificial market, but artificial markets aren't really "capitalism."
People always go after what they want. If they can't get exactly what they want, or the cost is higher than they're willing to pay, they look for alternatives.
Legal, illegal, doesn't matter.
That is "capitalism" self correcting.
"Capitalism," markets, economies, are always self correcting.
Just not always in ways that are in the best interest of a particular arbitrary or artificially defined nation, laws, group, or individual.
There is no "SUPPOSED" to except in artificial markets which are usually dictated by a government.
Hows the drug trade the government is "SUPPOSED" to control working?
when workers are needed, and no one is willing to work at the proposed wage, the wages are supposed to rise
That would be true if you're in a high school introduction to economics class and are looking at extremely limited hypothetical examples in an absolutely controlled artificial market.
When people want to buy something, and no one is willing to sell it to them for the amount they are offering, they are supposed to raise what they are willing to pay.
Only if there are absolutely no alternatives and what they want to buy is absolutely immediately necessary and you're in a frozen moment of time with absolutely no potential for future change in anything...conditions which pretty much only exist in high school introduction to economics class hypotheticals.
Bringing in foreign workers, means that this economy is purposely directing part of it's wealth away from itself, into the economy of another country.
Again too simplistic.
A job not being done creates no value/wealth at all.
If "no one" is willing to work for the wages, then no work is getting done, at all.
No value or wealth or tax money is created.
Bringing in foreign workers would create some value, as the work is being done.
Money is flowing in as profit to a company, owner is using the money. Buying supplies. Living their non foreign life. Taxes are being collected and paid by the business, as potentially only wages are being paid under the table to avoid taxation and repatriated to foreign markets.
And that doesn't count the people that were roofless now having roofs so going back to work or increasing production because they don't have rain problems.
At best you can say "bringing in foreign workers, means that this economy is purposely directing part of it's wealth away from itself, into the economy of another country. Some wealth is being produced for the local economy, but not as much as there potentially could be. But the alternative is that no wealth would be produced at all since no one was willing to work for the wages."
Raising the minimum wage for the same amount of work wouldn't create any real value or wealth at all and probably hurt the economy by increasing costs.
It would simply shift money around as people diverted money from one thing in order to pay for higher costs in roofing, then demand more in compensation from their work/efforts to offset having to divert money towards roofing.
Not to mention it may cause people to leave just as high paying and potentially higher economic value/wealth creating jobs for "roofing."
So in actuality you at best discovered "An accidental argument in favor of" keeping minimum wage the same or lower for jobs no one is willing to take in order to entice foreign workers to take jobs, no one is willing to take, in order to avoid raising costs everywhere else, to create at least some new value/wealth as it wouldn't be created since no one was willing to take the jobs before, and to reduce job drift from high value/wealth jobs to lower value/wealth jobs just for the sake of "jobs."
And all of that screed doesn't even address the concept of innovation and stagnation based on government enforced wage protection.