DBT
Contributor
I think that Unemployment Benefits are higher than that in Australia.
I think this thing will fail spectacularly
Not because of anything Dan Price has done. If it fails, which I doubt, it'll fail because of there are external vested interests in seeing it fail. It's probably seen by hard core capitalists as setting a bad precedent, raising expectations for better pay amongst the 'lower classes.'
Not because of anything Dan Price has done. If it fails, which I doubt, it'll fail because of there are external vested interests in seeing it fail. It's probably seen by hard core capitalists as setting a bad precedent, raising expectations for better pay amongst the 'lower classes.'
This is very conspiratorial thinking. There are lots of legitimate business reasons why it would fail, the most predominant being that the business will lack capital to fuel growth (it will be capital constrained - the growth phase requires a large influx of capital each year) and thus put it in a worse competitive position going forward, as well as having a much smaller buffer to survive the inevitable industry crashes. If this policy is also paired with limiting top executive pay (which it sounds like it very well could, given the philosophy of the CEO), then there could also be problems obtaining and retaining executive talent.
This is very conspiratorial thinking. There are lots of legitimate business reasons why it would fail, the most predominant being that the business will lack capital to fuel growth (it will be capital constrained - the growth phase requires a large influx of capital each year) and thus put it in a worse competitive position going forward, as well as having a much smaller buffer to survive the inevitable industry crashes. If this policy is also paired with limiting top executive pay (which it sounds like it very well could, given the philosophy of the CEO), then there could also be problems obtaining and retaining executive talent.
Not conspiratorial thinking at all. It's just the human nature, business and self interest works. Businesses do not like to fork out any more in terms of expenditure than they need to. It is in the interest of firms to keep wages down to what they deem to be acceptable levels, while it is in the interest of workers to increase their income to whatever they can demand. An inherit conflict between the needs and interests of both parties.
What transcripts? the guy left universty when he was 19. The guy has no transcripts.I find it highly amusing that Barbos thinks he is better educated than Dan Price. I guess Barbos has access to Dan Price's education transcripts and will post them here along-side his own for all of us to see for ourselves.
My rationale? in what fucking universe it is my rationale?I know many people with physics backgrounds who have taken economics. Typically, they are excellent with the mathematics and utterly lousy with the economic reasoning.
Using your rationale, that is irrelevant unless you run a business.I am certainly more educated than Price and vast majority of the businessmen.
Yes it's my well educated and explained opinionThat is only true if his pay is "unnecessary". However, if it spurs productivity and/or reduce staff turnover sufficiently, it may increase profits.Everything Price detractors have said so far is true. By paying unnecessary more than competitors he made himself less competitive.
That is your opinion.All competitors need to do now, wait a little and reduce prices and Price and his little experiment are history, or do nothing and let him die slow death. 70K minimum wage is absolutely not sustainable unless you are law firm or you have nice monopoly/cartel.
Someone who is somebody. Surely this experiment have got enough publicity to get warrant attention from big shot economists from universities.It may turn out correct or it may not. Let's wait and see.
I am a professional economist, and I think the experiment is interesting.Now, go and find me single economist who would sign on Price experiment.
Not conspiratorial thinking at all. It's just the human nature, business and self interest works. Businesses do not like to fork out any more in terms of expenditure than they need to. It is in the interest of firms to keep wages down to what they deem to be acceptable levels, while it is in the interest of workers to increase their income to whatever they can demand. An inherit conflict between the needs and interests of both parties.
You said it will fail because of "external vested interests" seeing it fail. Can you elaborate what you have in mind with this statement? Your reply does not in any way address that.
You said it will fail because of "external vested interests" seeing it fail. Can you elaborate what you have in mind with this statement? Your reply does not in any way address that.
What I said was - ''If it fails, which I doubt, it'll fail because of there are external vested interests in seeing it fail'' - the most likely form that this self interest in keeping a cap on wages would be a scare campaign, the 'economy' would suffer, high unemployment, etc, etc...just like we have on this very forum only in the form of a media blitz.
What I said was - ''If it fails, which I doubt, it'll fail because of there are external vested interests in seeing it fail'' - the most likely form that this self interest in keeping a cap on wages would be a scare campaign, the 'economy' would suffer, high unemployment, etc, etc...just like we have on this very forum only in the form of a media blitz.
Ah, got it. I thought you meant "fail" in the sense that the company will either go belly up or have to reverse this policy to survive, not "fail" as some sort of chain reaction where other businesses copy it.
Ah, got it. I thought you meant "fail" in the sense that the company will either go belly up or have to reverse this policy to survive, not "fail" as some sort of chain reaction where other businesses copy it.
Whether the company fails in terms of its business practices is not so much the issue as the example of what the owner has done for his staff. The idea of a dramatic increase in wages and salaries is the thing that is not in the interest of 'external observers' in the business world, who I'm sure would not be happy to see the OP example become an established practice.
Whether the company fails in terms of its business practices is not so much the issue as the example of what the owner has done for his staff. The idea of a dramatic increase in wages and salaries is the thing that is not in the interest of 'external observers' in the business world, who I'm sure would not be happy to see the OP example become an established practice.
If, as some have argued, such practice will lead to increased profits, then why would anyone be unhappy?
If, as I believe to be the case, it will result in lowered profits, on what grounds do you believe it could become an established practice and not some isolated move by someone who has more charitable than business motives?
From my perspective, I would give far more praise to a CEO who donates 90% of his salary to the Against Malaria foundation than I would to a CEO who gives 90% of his salary to employee raises to privileged first world employed individuals who already earn more than double the federal minimum wage.
Actually, it comes from profits too.If, as some have argued, such practice will lead to increased profits, then why would anyone be unhappy?
Obviously not everyone agrees, as demonstrated on this thread. Nor is the idea of a dramatic wage rise appealing, for the given reasons, to many of those who happen to own or run a business.
If, as I believe to be the case, it will result in lowered profits, on what grounds do you believe it could become an established practice and not some isolated move by someone who has more charitable than business motives?
The higher pay rates are not coming directly out of company profits,
Because they are not owners of the company. If they want fair share of profits then they should become owners of the company.Dan Price willingly lowered his own personal income in order to increase the pay rates of his staff, hence it should have no effect on how the business performs in terms of company income and running costs.
From my perspective, I would give far more praise to a CEO who donates 90% of his salary to the Against Malaria foundation than I would to a CEO who gives 90% of his salary to employee raises to privileged first world employed individuals who already earn more than double the federal minimum wage.
Well, as it is the employees who make the running of the business possible through their skill, time and effort, why should they not have a fair share of pie....? As it currently stands, money is flowing upward at an unsustainable rate.
Silly you. And...From my perspective, I would give far more praise to a CEO who donates 90% of his salary to the Against Malaria foundation than I would to a CEO who gives 90% of his salary to employee raises to privileged first world employed individuals who already earn more than double the federal minimum wage.
Well, as it is the employees who make the running of the business possible through their skill, time and effort, why should they not have a fair share of pie....? As it currently stands, money is flowing upward at an unsustainable rate.
Silly Dan Price! Doesn't he get it?? Economic necessity demands that we make CEO's happy while simultaneously making cubicle workers miserable, because that's the only way to improve their productivity...
Viewing workers in this way is not economic reasoning, of course; it amounts to Calvinist moralizing. In fact, most economic policies are shaped by a set of moral values more than by a set of natural facts. For at least a generation we have celebrated the rich while vilifying the poor, and we have shaped our economic policies to reflect and reinforce those attitudes.
This is what Dan Price has risked exposing and why so many of the orthodox are rooting for Gravity Payments to fail. After all, if the company does well, it will be a bit harder to ignore that charlatan behind the curtain everywhere else.
In this thread you asked "I presume you run a company? What is the name of the company?". If I misunderstood your response to have some actual purpose, I apologize.My rationale? in what fucking universe it is my rationale?
Was it me who asked about what business I run?
Opinions are not well-educated, people are. Your opinion ignores some real possible effects and seems a bit premature.Yes it's my well educated and explained opinion
If by "signing it up" you mean endorsing it, I am.Someone who is somebody. Surely this experiment have got enough publicity to get warrant attention from big shot economists from universities.
And If I read you correctly you are not signing it up.
No, it was not me.In this thread you asked "I presume you run a company? What is the name of the company?".
apology acceptedIf I misunderstood your response to have some actual purpose, I apologize.
The higher pay rates are not coming directly out of company profits, Dan Price willingly lowered his own personal income in order to increase the pay rates of his staff, hence it should have no effect on how the business performs in terms of company income and running costs.
In post #206 you wroteNo, it was not me.
. Are you disavowing what you actually posted?I presume you run a company?
What is the name of the company?
No, you need to follow the the whole exchange.In post #206 you wrote
. Are you disavowing what you actually posted?I presume you run a company?
What is the name of the company?
Maybe. One could look at as a form of reinvesting retained earnings to improve future profitability. Are you under the impression that no one can come up with a new idea to improve profitability?The higher pay rates are not coming directly out of company profits, Dan Price willingly lowered his own personal income in order to increase the pay rates of his staff, hence it should have no effect on how the business performs in terms of company income and running costs.
He's the proprietor of the business. His salary is equivalent to company profits.
One question I would ask is why -- if this move is designed to increase profits -- he didn't do it before? Did he suddenly gain some insight that the way to have more profit was to slash his profits?
Are you under the impression that any changes yields immediate results? Really?Why isn't he doing this immediately instead of phasing it in over three years? He doesn't want the additional profit yet? He wants the employees to suffer a little longer?
Unlike your comments, there is no logical inconsistency with his views and actions.Why is he waxing to the media about fairness and equality and stories about people with less money eating him up inside and social issues he can do something about if the motive is "more profits"?
I agree someone is missing the context. But we disagree on who that is.No, you need to follow the whole the whole conversation.In post #206 you wrote
. Are you disavowing what you actually posted?
It's youI agree someone is missing the context. But we disagree on who that is.