What's the real problem? It's not that EMPLOYERS as a class are screwing wage-earners.
You're going too far in the other direction. We need both labor and capital. What the left fails to understand is that an increasing percentage of the pie is going to the tooling that makes workers more productive.
No, the evidence shows that an increasing percentage of the pie is going into the pockets of the already wealthy.
Let's assume that's correct, however this was calculated. What's for sure is that the share going to wage labor is stagnant or decreasing while profits increase.
Must all wages automatically increase,
as an Absolute Universal Law handed down from on High?
Why? There's nothing in economics which says EVERYONE in the economy has to keep getting higher and higher income from their work as the economy improves. There are still some whose income decreases,
because THEIR VALUE DECREASES despite the increasing value of other producers. This is actually the norm, as certain producers become obsolete and their jobs are eliminated. The fact is that some (or much) of the wage labor has decreased in value, as the supply of labor has increased and more jobs are replaced by machines.
Even if these disappearing jobs, or jobs becoming less valuable, are a large part of the economy, still it's necessary for them to decline and for those workers to change to something more valuable if they are to maintain the same income level as before. It makes no sense to just pity them and artificially prop them up in their uncompetitive jobs because they might be a large segment of the economy, or because they are a high-profile segment, like steel workers or auto workers. Just because we have romantic adoration for some of these is no reason to artificially prop them up as icons or symbols to be maintained for their nostalgic value.
Here again is a scenario illustrating that it's wrong to maintain "jobs" only for nostalgia, or out of pity for the uncompetitive workers:
Jobs Created by ELIMINATING Wind Power *
Last year a wind-powered sawmill was built near the Strand, London. (The Strand is a major road following the Thames River.) Apparently it has been such a successful business that
a lot of sawyers are out of work. (A sawyer is a man who saws wood by hand.) King Charles the 1st of England is fighting an economic slump
so he demolishes the sawmill in order to quell a possible riot and puts the sawyers back to work. [1] [2] [3] [4]
http://tspwiki.com/index.php?title=1634#Jobs_Created_by_ELIMINATING_Wind_Power_.2A
Doesn't everyone, at least today, recognize that the above action was wrong? Don't we know better than to provide "jobs" like the above, only for their babysitting role in the society? Even if the British 400 years ago were inferior to us today (or whatever explanation you want to give), don't we today have a higher understanding of human worth than to follow this kind of Neanderthal Economics?
Whatever is wrong, can't we see that mere obsessing on
"jobs! jobs! jobs! jobs! jobs! jobs! jobs! jobs!" per se is not going to fix it?
So then, what does it mean to say "an increasing percentage of the pie is going into the pockets of the already wealthy"? Is there something wrong in this? Maybe, but it's not that those lower-level wage-earners are getting shafted. Because their decline is simply a reflection of
their decreasing value, as they can easily be replaced while the same production continues. So, if something is wrong, it's that some of those in the highest brackets -- in the top 10%, or top 1%, or top .1% -- are taking a disproportionate share. A simple solution generally is to get a higher tax percent from those top elite.
So instead of transferring wealth from the top elites to the low-level low-value wage-earners, so these are artificially propped up above their value, the transfer should be from those top elites to the whole economy, to everyone, to the state which needs the revenue for infrastructure to serve all the population.
Failure to do this might be what's causing some stagnation in the economy generally, as there is a vast increase in public debt, plus also a failure to do needed infrastructure, both due to lack of revenue to pay for needed infrastructure.
All the symptoms of a failing system are explained by this, rather than by the false perception that the common wage-earners are getting shafted or screwed out of their "fair share" of the wealth being produced.
So very possibly something is wrong, as too much wealth flows toward the super-rich. But this has nothing to do with EMPLOYERS as a class being stingy and cheating the workers. Rather, it's that some/most of the super-rich are not paying a high-enough share into the public revenue to pay for the public needs. This group of super-rich are not to be equated with all employers as a class, which includes some rich but also some middle- and even lower-income producers who are struggling to survive and who should NOT be seen as getting more than their fair share just because they are employers.