End of the day, you force companies to pay for interns and many of these unpaid opportunities will dry up. Yes, of course these places could afford to pay 7 bucks for someone. Question is "would they?". I don't think they would. These are really unneeded internships and if they start costing firms, they simply will not do them.
I had two good parents. Some people have two crappy parents, some have none. Such is life. Some people are born with ailments which prevent them from having a "normal" life. Deal with it. I look at successful people and I don't see people who ask others to level the playing field. I see people who go out and do it themselves.
I went to school and interned for free. I now have a great job because of it. Instead of lamenting on how "unfair" it is I sucked it up and got the job done.
End of the day I really just want to see other people succeed. I have a job and don't need to intern anymore. Mark my words though. The government will regulate this and these internships will dry up. Then see how hard it is to break into finance with a lower GPA or a less prestigious school. Complaining about a couple grand is trivial when you think of the earning potential a career in finance can provide. Unpaid internships are a valuable way to gain experience.
Here are some great words to live by. The only excuse is there is NO excuse. Whenever I hear people make up excused I simply stop listening. The person who didn't get the job or who came in second always has a "reason" why they didn't win. End of the day owning up to your own failures is much harder than blaming someone else. This might sound cold or d*ckish, but it is the way many people operate (especially in finance).
Ever read Malcolm Gladwell's "Outliers"? While the book itself is drivel because it simply says "hey, this is a problem!" and gives absolutely no solution, that endless wall of text might as well be good for pointing out the fact that a lot of people's opportunity comes from factors
outside their control. For example, Bill Gates had some
very well off parents (and was born at the right time). Both of Sergei Brin's parents were (and still
are to my knowledge) scientists/mathematicians. His mother IIRC is a senior atmospheric modeler at NASA, and his father is a professor of mathematics (STILL--despite the fact that odds are, Sergei could give him a rounding error amount of cash relative to his net worth and he'd be set for life). That kind of parenting is a lottery ticket in and of itself.
Look, as much as I'd
like to believe that anything is achievable for anybody so long as they "make no excuses" and "deal with it", that's just not the case. There's stuff like genetics (EG why was one of my friends from Lehigh 6'2 and has no natural facial hair while I'm built like a 5'4" hobbit because of the worst mistake my mother ever made in her lifetime?), parenting (EG if I grew up with two loving and supporting parents instead of just my mother), connections (how many kids go to Ivy Leagues and other prestigious universities, or even prestigious companies based on parents being alums), and so on and so forth.
At the end of the day, sure, anyone can eke out an existence for themselves if they just keep pulling themselves up by their bootstraps, but even getting in the door of some places is a Herculean effort compared to what connected (or brilliant) parents can do for their children.
As for an unpaid internships, even if a company had to pay some nominal wage, they'd be far more valuable to a company than not hiring the interns for several reasons:
A) Would you rather risk hiring someone full time for some mid five figures guaranteed based off of a piece of paper and three hours of talks, or be able to observe them for several months? This is an option on the part of the employers.
B) If that intern does good work, well, let's do some math here...assume $15 an hour. Assume 50 hours a week. Assume 12 weeks. That's 750 a week * 12 weeks = $9000. Can that intern deliver more than $9000 of value in 12 weeks? If so, you've recouped your investment.
C) And if not, well, what kind of business are you running? Say you're running a trading shop. What happens if you lose $9000 in a day? Is that a massive, unacceptable loss, or is that just part of the business? Because if it's the former, what the hell are you doing running a trading shop?
D) Assuming you choose to move on and hire that intern, that intern will have now worked at your shop for several weeks and will have had a great deal of exposure to what goes on at the company than an entry-level employee that you need to pay full market rate yet spend the first several months training anyway.
The only reason that I'm morally against unpaid internships (though mine was nevertheless a good experience, as at the least, I made some very good friends there) is that the less-well-off do not have as good a chance because of the costs of living in a large city.
I mean look...if the employer partnered up with a local university to sublet a few dorms for the summer and provided breakfast, lunch, and leftovers for dinner for said intern, and a paid metro card, then sure, I'd have no problems with working for "free".
The entire bad taste comes from the fact that you have a company that can certainly pay for one more intern as part of its operating costs far more easily than an intern can pay for the costs of living.
Now, some people might live close to NYC and can commute there. For instance, when I interned for an actuarial firm, I took the PATCO from Cherry Hill into Philly. So they have no issues, (Not sure where you lived Anthony), and that's all well and good. But what if I had to intern for free in San Francisco now? Oh look, sorry, but I can't afford it. Who am I going to go to? My mother who makes ends meet teaching piano? (Yes, I have savings but for the purpose of argument, say I didn't.)
Okay, put it this way:
New regulation:
All internships must be, at the least, a net-zero financial outcome for the intern. That is, the intern should receive enough to cover room and board.
Would this suddenly dry up so many internship opportunities? That if you take on an intern, it's your responsibility to provide them a place to stay and make sure they have enough cash not to starve?
Edit: And IMO, if you're wealthy...you can already hire the best tutors for your children, you probably have an important job and know what works in the workplace and can give your kids a head start if you take time to be a parent...how much more of an advantage do kids with the most already need?