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Deleted member 18243
No, you've taken the wrong meaning from what I said.Are you suggesting that because someone is desperate it is reasonable to pay him a rate that will never allow him to find his feet?
There are situations where a person would happily work for less than the state minimum hourly wage.
For instance, I would like to go into semi-retirement sometime in the near future, giving up my full time job and taking a part-time one instead, and in that part-time job, I would happily work for less than the minimum wage under certain circumstances - such as the hours being convenient, the job being close to home and the work being agreeable.
Another, more pertinent, example would be a person who has an idea for a new business, but could not start that business because he could not afford staff. He might know people who would help him out by taking a low wage, but cannot do so legally. That is an example of state intervention thwarting trade and industry.
Those examples don't apply to job-seekers finding their feet and who are short of money, obviously.