Originally posted by Bobo the Ape
It's actually not necessarily semantics. Much of the compensation package may be in the form of options and such. These do not come out of the corporate bank account and do not affect the amount of money to pay the rest of the workers. I've been at two different companies that when they couldn't give out raises they just handed out more useless stock. Why? Because it didn't cost them anything.
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semantics.
fact: the bosses have a way better living than the workers
compared to the relation a few decades ago.
So the guy at the top makes more? When in human existence was it not the case that the guy at the top was better off?
You are avoiding the issue! The guy at the top is earning more and more each year in comparison to the worker - who also earny more and more, but the percentage is going down.
In case you weren't simply trying to avcoid the issue and really didn't get it:
if you earn $1000 and the boss $2000, then you earn 50% of his wage.
Now, if you later earn $2000, you have doubled your wage - but the boss will be at around $10,000 - essentially you suddenly only earn 20% of his wage.
Woudln't it be fair if you earn more and he less, keeping the 50%-relation?
or have, in the past 50 years, the workers gotten dumber and less productive while the bosses got smarter and carry more responsibility?
If a large amount of high paying jobs were replaced with lower paying jobs then the math says that average wages would drop. However, that's not the case.
Tsk, tsk, the median will drop, but the average can easily stay high - juest give the some huge sums to a very few top earners..... (which is what happenes)
When the cost of employee benefits gets too high the company can either decrease the employees or the benefits.
Or, when the cost of employment benefit gets too high, the company can look at who gets incredibly high benefits and cut them - i.e. the huge compensations for ex-managers who led the firm into near-ruin.
I am thinking here of quite a few cases of 50 million buck benefits for people who ruined large cmpanies - from that money you could have paid half the laid of workers for 2 years in one case!
You don't "have" to contribute any part of your paycheck to the 401K. It's up to you. Most companies will match what you put in. [/quot]
Oh, great, you have the choice to stay uninsured - how nice of the company to let you!
Why do they not pay it all (as most used to?). To give you the choice of not doing it at all? How democratic!
What does the unemployment rate have to do with "corporate greed"? While the salaries of most CEOs is huge in comparison to the average salary it's usually an incredibly small percentage of total operating costs. Simply cutting the CEOs money will have little if no impact on reviving most failing companies.
Interestingly, this is not true - in many middle-sized firms the total wage&benefits package (compensation on getting fired included!!!) is NOT a negligible percentage of the firms PROFITS!
The point is this. The objective of most companies is to make money. It's not to provide benefits for it's employees. Benefits are there to attract employees. If the cost of doing business becomes greater than the revenues then,corporate welfare, the company fails and guess who gets hurt most?.......the working man not the CEO.
What firm is better off and is better for society:
Firm A makes a huge profit each year by giving no benefits whatsoever, paying minimum wage and not insuring the workers. It DOES however pay all the profit into buying sweatshop companies from Asia, risks the huge amounts also in the Stock Market and gives high profits for stock owners.
Firm B makes hardly a profit. It sells a huge amount of goods, pays out almost all the profit in wages and cannot afford to expand into the stock market.
Which is better?