Facebook? Mark Zuckerberg
Yeah, last time I looked Zuckerberg was worth a little over $13 BILLION dollars.
OOPs
Arthur
Facebook? Mark Zuckerberg
Dude. I don't need your input. If you don't like the idea you don't have to contribute to the discussion, and frankly I'd prefer if you didn't. I don't like your attitude.
Maybe he could they only have 2,000 employees but because of that does he deserve more or less than the CEO of Google with it's 20,000 employees or Boeing with its 100,000?
Big OOPS, the bigger the company, the more demanding and harder the job is being the CEO, but the lower your compensation will be.
Arthur
Are you saying if ALL means of production belonged to the government that there would be no fraud?You've pointed out a basic problem with capitalism...fraud, in so many words.
Billy, what defines your word...GOOD?SM has not offered any strong reason to think his idea is a good one
I thought I would start a new thread on this topic. I hope discussion won't drift onto "tax brackets" because that's not what this is. This would be a regulation, like the minimum wage. But it wouldn't be a fixed value, it would be a ratio, based on the lowest paid worker at a given organization.
Basic rundown....
I've read that in California, 50% of the government tax revenue comes from the taxes paid by the richest 1%, ie. CEOs and executives of big corporations. Elsewhere the percentage of tax revenue coming from the super rich is nearly as high.
The government has trouble stabilizing its tax revenues because of the volatile nature of these super-rich people that pay such a large portion of it. What would happen if the government introduced a law that eliminated the need to tax the rich, by redistributing the wealth using a "maximum wage ratio" ?
I propose a maximum annualized wage (including the value of all basic pay, bonuses, commissions, contracts, shares, etc.) earned by an employee, owner, shareholder, etc. of a company that is equal to 5-times the annualized income of the lowest paid worker at a company.
Case 1: If a company is a sole proprietorship, the annualized income can be as high as you want.
Case 2: If a company is a partnership, the annualized income of one partner cannot be more than 5-times larger than the income of the other partner.
Case 3: If a company employs 10000 people, and the lowest paid worker makes $10/hr (temp, contract, or full-time), or $20,000 annualized, then the top executive cannot make more than $100,000 (cumulative from pay, shares, bonuses, etc).
Case 4: If a business owner is a foreigner who lives abroad, then the same rule applies. The annualized amount of fungible assets paid to that owner could not be larger than 5-times the amount transferred to the lowest paid worker.
Case 5: If a business owner wants to start more than one business, then this might be a way to bypass the limitation. Each business would then pay a certain amount as annual yields, not exceeding the 5-fold maximum wage limit.
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Cons:
a. that this would require a layer of oversight by the government,
b. businesspeople are obviously going to look for loopholes to increase their wealth beyond this limit, such as by charging personal expenses to the business without giving their employees the same right.
Pros:
a. I see this as a fair way to distribute wealth to a much larger number of people and thereby stabilizing the government's tax revenues.
b. there would be more money in the hands of a larger population to spend on basic goods & services, thereby stabilizing the economy.
Opinions?
When used as an adjective, as I did in "good idea" it means one that is like to make some improvement in the status quo. For example some improvement in the way fuel was introduced to an IC engine (fuel injectors were better as precise amount needed was added to the cylinder instead of just what the lower pressure sucked in, often not a proper mixture and typically with excess that was not completely oxidized.)Billy, what defines your word...GOOD?
He's arguing that his wage ratio idea is simply more ETHICAL than its alternative.
I dont agree with SM at all...you may remember that my definition of an ethical transaction is a CONSENSUAL transaction in the context of full disclosure.Both you and SM seem to think that it is more "ETHICAL" to limit the top salaries to 5 times the lowest (or average?) salary, but ethics is a very subjective force, especially when applied to economic considerations. Normally to show that "A" is better than "B" economically one needs to have some sort of "The greatest benefit for the most people of average person" argument.
Yes. All decisions have some ethical impacts, but this rule is economically the most beneficial for the society. - Maximizes total wealth productions but quite often is not equal division of wealth. I.e. the idea it to make the pie bigger, even if some get bigger slices than others.... 'The greatest benefit for the largest number'...is also an ethical consideration, no?
Yes. All decisions have some ethical impacts, but this rule is economically the most beneficial for the society. - Maximizes total wealth productions but quite often is not equal division of wealth. I.e. the idea it to make the pie bigger, even if some get bigger slices than others.
It was Henry Ford's true revolutionary idea - pay the workers well so they can buy the products of mass production which is by far the most economical way to make things. Henry's Idea was not to get a bigger piece of shrinking pie but that everyone gets a bigger piece via the economies of mass production, especially Henry Ford gets a bigger piece that way.
Rand was an objectivist...not a libertarian.This world is radically different than the one envisioned by Ayn Rand and the Austrian School.
Wouldn't it shock you if a majority of workers supported my idea then?
In some places in the world, it might be considered a "good idea" and in the interests of the status quo: Paying people more so they can purchase the products of mass production.
IMHO, this reflects two sad facts about American (and some other societies to a lesser extent):This pretty much destroys the rationale for getting an education. Good luck paying loans from college and med/law/business school when you are only making 5 times the janitor's wage.
IMHO, this reflects two sad facts about American (and some other societies to a lesser extent):
(1) The idea that the goal of {higher} education is to be able to earn more money.
(2) That Education is expensive, instead of nearly free to serious students who want education for its own sake.
First is failure of the students and second a failure of the society. Many should not spend four years in college - only those you love education or want to acquire skills to serve, like become a doctor. Too little admiration is extended to skilled carpenters, plumbers, auto mechanics, etc.
Part of the reason why US has a "for profit" medical services system, instead of doctors and nurses on salaries as most other advanced nations with socialized medicine do, is the control over the opportunity to enter medical schools (number of school opening far less than number of students wishing to become doctors). The world's most powerful guild / labor union, the AMA, limits their competition from young idealistic doctors who want to serve more than they want to grow rich via medicine. The AMA likes that average doctor in US charges four or five times more than a European doctor does. You cannot open a new medical school in most states, if not all, without the AMA's approval of your staff, procedures, courses, etc. Many countries will give free medical education if you agree to serve several years in some area lacking adequate service.
SUMMARY: Education should be for your personal growth, not a ticket to a high paying job. Instructions for services that require expensive training and are in short supply (to the poor mainly) should have essentially free education if student agrees to server for several years where those services are needed. The US is a "rich nation." - It spends more on wars and military than rest of the world and far more there than it does on education. The US has twice the per capita cost of medical services and 2 to 3 years LOWER life expectancy than other advanced nations with its "for profit" medicine and rich doctors instead of dedicated doctors serving on salaries.