GhostWriter16
Deity
Gramsci is fantastic and almost as rewarding to read as Marx, both on the practical knowledge level as well as the sheer amount of culture you get from their constant references and such.
Okay, so the income for a company comes from two places: investment, and sales. Workers are generally not paid for investments, because they don't have anything to do with them. So let's just say they get paid a percentage of the sales from the products they make. It should be an obvious fact that the sales after payment of expenses, which does not include labor cost (payrolls should not be included in calculations determining what profit is), are split by the capitalist between himself and his workforce. Since a product has two sources of price, which are production cost (value) and speculative "profit" cost, we can determine that the labor involved is a defining factor in a commodity's price, and thus in the profit it yields.
Now, if this were socialism, then the worker would be paid in full for his share of production, after the sales income from their products is processed. So if there were 20 workers and 20 commodities were sold which, after production costs were factored in, yielded $10 profit each, then each person would receive $10. However, with the capitalist added to the equation, perhaps each worker only get $2 in this situation, and the capitalist keeps the extraneous $160. Thus it can effectively be said that the worker pays the capitalist for part of the right to produce something on his machine, and receive a pittance in return. We can also gather that he does not receive his full compensation for his part of the production process.
Thus, the working day can effectively be divided into two parts: one part, where the worker produces the amount of product equivalent to the pay he receives for doing so, and another part, where he works to pay the capitalist (because the capitalist keeps a certain amount of the income from selling said products). While the ratio between the two will vary between time, place, and profession, a 1:1 ratio doesn't seem entirely outlandish; in fact, it may be a bit generous.
I can see your point if you don't respect the property rights of the Capitalist to own his machine (Which I don't really understand WHY yet, but I'm getting there

That stated, what percentage of the population do you actually feel would be financially better of in socialism or communism than in Capitalism? Obviously the richest of the rich will benefit under capitalism more and the poorest of the poor benefit a lot more under socialism, but at what point do they become equal?
Also, would you agree that someone who does more difficult work (Either because it requires more physical effort, skill, or education) should be paid more than someone who does an easier job? And how would that work in a socialist system?