I think that's a false choice, and I'm not going to be forced into answering a false choice.
There are two things to say. One is that jobs that Honduras has put in place that do not pay the minimum wage, which Honduras itself has estimated barely covers people's basic need for food and necessities, that come at the expense of the protection of workers in the long run and of the right to unionize, are not good jobs, even if people who are living in such dire poverty feel they are forced to take those jobs for their own good.