You're still causing economic damage to these businesses which are the primary employers of low-wage labor
and to the consumers who pay higher prices (these consumers comprise most of the population).
). So correct, people who earn much more than the minimum wage might not see any direct economic benefit from an increased minimum wage (though indirectly there's an increase in demand for the goods THEY're producing). For the minimum wagers the increase in price of the goods they buy made by minimum wagers will be smaller than the increase in their wage, so they will see an increase in purchasing power, extra money they can spend on other goods. So the question is not "would an increase of the minimum wage be economically good?" but "FOR WHOM would an increase be good/bad?". It's a primarily a question of politics and self-interest, not economical "science".
You only forget that some existing restaurants will be closed because the rise in minimum wages makes them not profitable enough, and new restaurants will not be opened for the same reason.
The demand to be referred to is not the demand of lunches but the demand of workers by restaurants owners.
Or the restaurant-owner will simply ignore the law all-together and employ personnel illegally. I'm surprised that a Belgian like Maniac doesn't think of that.
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