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What is wage theft exactly?

I'm not like a super political person, and from my understanding its the idea that if I make a $10 thing for the bossman, but only get $1 that is wage theft?

But like, when I took the job I knew how much I was going to make?

Or is it like, people are literally not getting their paychecks?

I'm slightly inebreated, lazy, and don't want my algorithms to start becoming politically charged from googling and youtubing this. I'm already collapse aware and my mental health is ultra fragile.

Help me Lemmy wan kenobi, you're my only hope.

61 comments
  • I’m not like a super political person, and from my understanding its the idea that if I make a $10 thing for the bossman, but only get $1 that is wage theft?

    Wage theft is technically, when companies or bosses, managers, whatever, do not provide compensation to an employee that they are due. There's lots of ways it happens - I work in contract security and a super common method is charging people for uniforms. In my state it's straight up illegal to charge for uniforms, but they're stealing money. SO the way that scam works is they take it out of your paycheck as a deduction; and then send that money to an account they control that nobody else is looking at.

    Another way they do it is messing with people's hours, shorting them time, giving it to a fake employee that nobody who merely looks at the books is going to notice. That actually happened at a competing company here. The manager suddenly decided to "retire" and then dropped off the radar for a few months when the union started asking questions. An hour or two, every few pay cycles nobody notices. but it adds up when when taking ten or fifteen hours a pay cycle spread across hundreds of employees.

    Another way it happens is in restaurants where management takes tips. Especially when it's integrated into a PoS system...

    and then there's always the wage theft that happens with undocumented people being vulnerable.

  • A fair day's work = a fair day's pay

    If you do more work you should get more pay.

    If you do less work you should get less pay.

    If you are paid less for doing the same amount of work, or if you do more work for the same amount of pay, then you're no longer getting a fair day's pay for a fair day's work.

    Wage theft is serious business and it's kind of insidious.

    "hey I need you to stay on a couple hours after" then you're paid the same amount as normal - wage theft

    "you can't leave till the next shift gets here" and you're not paid for the time you wait - wage theft

    "your wage is 25 an hour, that's 200 a day, the hours are nine till five but most people do 8 till 6" - wage theft (the actual wage is 20 an hour)

    "if there's a dine and dash it comes from your paycheck" - wage theft

    "you start at 12.50 an hour then go up to 25 after three months." then at 2 months 3 weeks "sorry it didn't work out, goodbye" - wage theft

    Wage thieves usually target people that don't know they're being taken advantage of. Often people desparate for work, or not highly skilled, or just naive, or trusting. Hence it is (in my mind) predatory.

    Fwiw time theft is the other side of the coin.

61 comments