Organized labor always focused on the better-paid workers.
So even better-paid workers may lose employer contributions.
And better-paid workers - those earning at least $50,000 - account for twice the share of the lost jobs than they did in the 1980's.
Yes, it is true that better-paid workers can afford better clothes.
In general, employers were more likely to provide for their better-paid skilled workers who were less easily replaced than the unskilled labourers.
The legislation did most for the better-paid male workers, an increasingly crucial sector of the workforce both economically and politically.
For better-paid workers and their families, housing conditions were much improved and the diet was better.
Use of some of these methods would even allow us to have better-paid and better-educated child-care workers.
To be sure, better-paid workers in short supply - computer programmers, technicians and the like - have enjoyed significant pay increases recently.
The $35,000 lump-sum payment, for example, is roughly half what some better-paid workers earn in a year.