I'll just say that I have taken general economic classes and micro/macro economic courses, and finance as well. I also work currently as an accountant. I've read Dave Ramsey's Entraleadership and I'm generally interested in the subject.
On a micro level
While I do not have the experience or understanding of being a business owner, I do understand the idiology how worker wages effect the overall scope of our economy; it all boils down to spending money, buying stocks, bonds, ect. With our earnings. But the market also fixes itself when lack of demand lowers prices or prices get too high and people cash out their earnings or stop buying. So While their are some companies that are struggling and cannot hire/raise wages and some jobs do not pertain to making higher wages based off the type of company, like small cheap mom and pop restaurants, many companies are taking advantage of their workers based on 1990 living standards, while psycologically preserving the mentality to their workers that our current rate is "acceptable" in this economy.
Brooke, I do not think our economy is that great either, or as good as it should be. Though on a macro level it has been slowely increasing over the passed few years. Unfortunately from a personal aspect, in Natcigg's example, the mass average of people do not understand credit completely and this causes detrimental effects to lower-middle class earners who were expected to pay these debts back. With the highest amounts of turnover rates ever, the middle class is desperately sluggling to keep up. If automation is bad for the "workers" but good for business, the remaining employees who work them should make higher wages... And of course the companies who design and disperse these products should riase worker rages as their demand will increase. Fortunately or not, automation is almost inevitable.
Edit
P.S I am so thankful to live in America and because of many factors I will most likely never gain citizenship or live in an other country if I don't absolutely have to. So yeah Morfiend, I'd hate to pay those kind of taxes.