Another example, announced this past summer,
is the administration’s scheme to expand the number of workers who are
prohibited from working more than 40 hours per week unless they are paid
time-and-a-half for every hour they work above 40. Currently, salaried
workers with supervisory roles who earn more than $23,660 annually can
agree to employment contracts under which, if they work more than 40
hours weekly, they get paid nothing extra.
….
If employers, to avoid paying overtime wages
to salaried workers, reduce the number of hours these employees work
each year, the amount of annual output that these employees produce for
their employers obviously falls. These workers become less valuable to
their employers. Many employers — operating in highly competitive
industries such as food retailing and lawn-and-garden care — will have
no choice but to lay some of these salaried workers off or to reduce
these workers’ salaries. Either way, bargains struck voluntarily between
employers and employees are upended by heavy-handed regulation, making
both employers and workers worse off."
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