Bitcoin For Wal-Mart And Target

Edward Harrison profile picture
Edward Harrison
58.41K Followers

This post is about three different topics, Bitcoin and e-Payments, the Minimum Wage, and consumer spending and Wal-Mart (NYSE:WMT). There has been a lot of discussion about all three and I believe I have an innovative way to attack all three issues that will satisfy most reasonable people and change both the payments and online retail space. The idea is simply to for Wal-Mart (or Target (NYSE:TGT)) to conduct a de facto minimum wage increase of all of its minimum wage workers' salary by giving them extra salary in e-payments usable only at Wal-Mart and transferable securely via a payment algorithm similar to Bitcoin's.

The Minimum Wage

Here is the issue. During the Great Depression, the United States created a minimum wage law under the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938. The US Department of Labor chronicles it this way:

On Saturday, June 25, 1938, to avoid pocket vetoes 9 days after Congress had adjourned, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed 121 bills. Among these bills was a landmark law in the Nation's social and economic development -- Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 (FLSA). Against a history of judicial opposition, the depression-born FLSA had survived, not unscathed, more than a year of Congressional altercation. In its final form, the act applied to industries whose combined employment represented only about one-fifth of the labor force. In these industries, it banned oppressive child labor and set the minimum hourly wage at 25 cents, and the maximum workweek at 44 hours.

Now, this $0.25 per hour wage was increased steadily over time in both nominal and inflation-adjusted terms until 1968 when it hit $1.60 per hour, which would prove to be the highest level in inflation-adjusted terms at $10.71 per hour in 2013 money. Afterwards, the minimum wage did not keep up with the

This article was written by

Edward Harrison profile picture
58.41K Followers
Edward Harrison is a banking and finance specialist at the economic consultancy Global Macro Advisors focusing on global economics and corporate strategy. Previously, he was a partner at the consultancy Lion Strategy Advisors, and worked in various consulting, strategy and M&A roles at Deutsche Bank, Bain Consulting, the Corporate Executive Board and Yahoo. Mr. Harrison started his career as a diplomat in the foreign service. He speaks German, Dutch, Swedish, Spanish and French as well as English and can read a number of other European languages. He holds an MBA from Columbia Business School and completed his undergraduate studies with a degree in economics from Dartmouth College.

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