Matt - please define living wage to the exact $ and please make it location specific. I have about 100 more for you.
I'm really not here to discuss economics. It's a complicated question, worthy of a complicated answer, but this is not the venue for that discussion, and most caddies are probably making well above that if they're getting two loops per day... what I'm concerned about is the independent contractors that show up before sunrise, and then leave at noon because they haven't gone out once.
I'm perfectly fine with the system we have now with regard to wages, my point is about expecting professionalism. When many caddies have no idea whether they'll get paid that day, I don't know if I'd expect too much professionalism, I'd expect the job to be treated like being an uber driver, where people pick it up between other gigs. This is fair enough, but you're going to get plenty of bad apples, because the system is not set up to create new people dedicating their lives to the job. There are fine folks who love the game, and caddie because of it, and they'll probably be the first ones out in the morning and the first ones out at noon, but that creates a zero-sum environment, where the marginal caddie, by definition, might go home empty handed. We should care about the marginal caddie if we want professionalism in caddie services.
I won't comment on the rest of your post because,despite having never employed a caddie in your life, you clearly stayed in a Holiday Inn Express last night.... but what?
Feel free to make fun of me all you like, but if you're going to dismiss the concept of
population risk to sun exposure at a young age, I suggest you have a chat with a dermatologist. I'm not saying every individual caddie will serious negative health effects, I'm saying that if we build a system of youth caddie programs, we know a percentage of them
will experience negative health effects. 3% of fair skinned folks will have melanoma in their lifetime, when caught early the survival rate is high, but it is still non-negligible risk especially as the risks dramatically increase when the damage happens at a younger age.
“We used to say 50% of skin damage happened by your 20’s. Now it’s more like 25%,” says Susan Chon, M.D., professor in MD Anderson’s department of Dermatology. “That’s because people continue to be active and outdoors more throughout their life.”
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If you can help your kids avoid sunburn, you also reduce their risk of skin cancer. One or more blistering sunburns as a child can double the lifetime risk of the most serious skin cancer, melanoma.
MD Anderson Cancer Center