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First
Jobs
by John
Stossel
Jul 18,
2012
What was
your first job?
I stuck
pieces of plastic and metal together at an Evanston, Ill., assembly
line. We
produced photocopiers for a company called American Photocopy.
I hated the
work. It was hot and boring. But it was useful. It taught me to get
good grades
in school so I might have other choices.
Four years
later, good grades got me a job as a researcher at a TV station.
To my
surprise, that became a career. I never planned to be a TV reporter. I
hadn’t
even watched TV news. I never took a journalism course.
But by
showing up and trying stuff, I found a career.
I write
about this because I’m appalled watching politicians kill off “first”
jobs.
(They say it’s to protect us.)
First, they
raise the minimum wage. Forcing employers to pay $7.25 an hour leaves
them
reluctant to give unskilled kids a chance -- why pay more than a worker
can
produce? So they offer fewer “first” jobs.
On top of
that, the Obama Labor Department has issued a fact sheet that says free
internships are only legal if the employer derives “no immediate
advantage”
from the intern.
Are you
kidding me? What’s the point of that? I want interns who are helpful!
The
bureaucrats say they will crack down on companies that don’t pay, but
that’s a
terrible thing to do.
Unpaid
internships are great. They are win-win. They let young people
experiment with
careers, and figure out what they’d like and what they’re good at. They
help
employers produce better things and recruit new employees.
I’ve used
interns all my career. They have done some of my best research. Some
became
journalists themselves. Many told me: “Thank you! I learned more
working for
you than I learned in college, and I didn’t have to pay tuition!
I could
have paid them, but then I would have used fewer interns. When I worked
at ABC,
the network decided to pay them -- $10 an hour -- but it also cut the
number of
internships by half. Politicians don’t get it. Neither do most people.
Polls show
that Americans support raising the minimum wage. Most probably also
support
limits on unpaid internships, believing that they replace paid work.
But they
don’t.
OK,
sometimes they do. But the free exchange of labor creates so many good
things
that, in the long run, more jobs are created and many more people get
paid work
-- and we get better work.
But
American politicians think they “protect” workers by limiting
employers’ (and
workers’) choices and giving handouts to the unemployed.
Outside a
welfare office near Fox News, I was told that because of high
unemployment,
there are no jobs: “There’s nothing out there. Nothing.” I asked my
team to
check that out. They walked around for two hours, and within a few
blocks of
that welfare office they found lots of businesses that want to hire
people. On
the same block where I was told that there are no jobs, a store manager
said he
was desperate for applicants. “We need like two or three people all the
time.”
Of the 79
businesses that we asked, 40 said they would hire. Twenty-four said
they would
take people with no experience. All wished more people would apply.
I told
German Munoz, a recent high school graduate, about one of the jobs
offered, at
a soul food restaurant. He went there and was hired to wash dishes for
minimum
wage. Within a few days, he was promoted to busboy -- then to waiter.
Now, two
weeks later, he makes twice the minimum wage. German doesn’t want a
career as a
waiter, but he says it’s great having a real first job.
“I meet
successful people, and they give good advice and tips on how to become
successful. I love it. I love going there every day and learning new
stuff. It
is like a stepping stone,” he said. Exactly.
Low-wage
first jobs are indispensable for both personal advancement and social
progress.
Our best hope for prosperity is the free market. Government must get
out of our
way and allow consenting adults to create as many “first” jobs as
possible.
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