Well, that's also the purpose of workers so stop trying to make it sound like the workers are ungrateful layabouts that are trying to take more than they are worth when they attempt to get wages raised.
eta: can't wait for some of the "whoever said the purpose of a corporation is to make money?" comments sure to be forthcoming.
I was thinking about this the other day. As you know we have had a total deficit of examples of job killing regulations coming from those here who constantly list regulations as being an unneeded example of government overreach. This failure has remained as one of the larger blots on their less than impeccable records of empirical support for their economic ideas.
I have tried to help them in the past, listing local government zoning ordinances intended to boost property values as an example of undesirable expensive regulation, because they boost the cost of housing, infringe on property rights and prevent the best use of land. This suggestion was met with complete silence, leading me to think that most of the people here support these job killing ordinances.
Undeterred, I am ready to suggest another example of a job killing regulation. One inspired by this thread.
This is the law inspired by what Jack Welch, the retired CEO of GE, called 'the dumbest idea in the world.' And like many of the dumbest ideas of the end of the last century this idea seems to come from
Milton Friedman, the economist who specialized in bad ideas and failure.
The idea is shareholder value. That the sole purpose of the corporation is to make money for its shareholders by any means possible. And that the best way to assure this is by the use of stock based executive compensation.
I list this as an example of job killing regulations because it is widely known that it is the law in the US. I couldn't confirm this and have always doubted it. But I had corporate attorneys who told me this. And as I said, it is widely known to be true.
The idea is of course ridiculous. A corporation has a lot more responsibilities than just one to its shareholders. Customers, employees, and the public in general would be on that list, arguably above the shareholders.
There is no doubt that the idea was and still is popular, especially with corporate executives who doubled and tripled their pay under it.
And there is also no doubt that this idea is behind the large amount of corporate maleficence that we have seen lately.
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I see that others found sources both for and against the idea that shareholder value is only purpose that a corporation has and that it is the law. I am slow to post my tomes, they die before they are posted sometimes.