... It's been interesting to see calls from the CBI and even the odd Tory MP recently that firms should ensure they reward their workers appropriately so they are part of any recovery. If you wanted any indication they are not, then this has to be it ...
I also noticed that despite the CBI boss telling his members to pay the workers more this was short lived in that as soon as Ed M says he's going to ensure agency workers (on permanent contracts) aren't ripped off and are paid the same as directly employed permanent staff doing the same job, they oppose it.
According to today's City AM, the CBI is also warning government not to increase the minimum wage as a way of improving its own popularity.
As you say, its commitment to tackling the issue of low pay is, at best, lukewarm.
Expecting a large shareholder-owned company to act morally is, generally, futile. Its raison d'etre is to make as much money for shareholders as possible and will put itself at a disadvantage, compared to its competitors, if it fails to utilise profitable options that may be morally repugnant to others amongst us. In short, such businesses are, at best, amoral and we cannot expect different.
Hence, if we want to utilise the wealth creation of capitalism within a moral framework, then it is the job of government to regulate, i.e. impose popular morality by statute.
Your job is to say to yourself on a job interview does the hiring manager likes me or not. If you aren't a particular manager's cup of tea, you haven't failed -- you've dodged a bullet.
No. You missed the point about companies making super-normal profits. Paying workers based on the value that they create doesn't mean distributing all the profit back to them. It means an equitable distribution of profit based on what the company can realise by selling what the labour force creates for a profit, not selling for a profit and at the same time driving wages down regardless of how much profit is made.
It's been interesting to see calls from the CBI and even the odd Tory MP recently that firms should ensure they reward their workers appropriately so they are part of any recovery. If you wanted any indication they are not, then this has to be it.
By the way, I don't think they are being altruistic here but realise Labour have a point that whatever the economic figures say polling shows few believe that they are benefiting and unless that changes it could hurt Tory election hopes.
I also noticed that despite the CBI boss telling his members to pay the workers more this was short lived in that as soon as Ed M says he's going to ensure agency workers (on permanent contracts) aren't ripped off and are paid the same as directly employed permanent staff doing the same job, they oppose it.
How do you determine what constitutes super-normal profits and how many businesses fall into that category?
Businesses will pay what they have to pay to attract the calibre of labour they require. To pay more would be foolish and render them uncompetitive unless the whole market followed suit. You wouldn't pay over the asking price for anything would you? There are limited things government can do without negatively impacting the competiveness of individual businesses especially if we want to encourage exports.
Businesses are already paying a 14% tax on employing people - why not simply remove that at lower levels and increase the minimum wage by 14%?
I agree re the feel good factor in the economy but a timely cut in income tax cut/increase in personal allowance will sort that.
Expecting a large shareholder-owned company to act morally is, generally, futile. Its raison d'etre is to make as much money for shareholders as possible and will put itself at a disadvantage, compared to its competitors, if it fails to utilise profitable options that may be morally repugnant to others amongst us. In short, such businesses are, at best, amoral and we cannot expect different.
Hence, if we want to utilise the wealth creation of capitalism within a moral framework, then it is the job of government to regulate, i.e. impose popular morality by statute.
What about the small businessman? The person who has an idea and who decides to back themselves, putting a lot of time and effort into growing the brand. Are they also amoral, when in the fullness of time they can enjoy the salary/profits that their endeavours brought them? The nice house in a decent area, enough in the bank to pursue an expensive hobby, or fund a private education for their children etc etc. In short, enjoy the fruits of their labours.
Do we also disregard the jobs they may have created directly for their staff, or indirectly through the suppliers they use?
Are you actually proposing that at some point in the success of this enterprise, you would expect Big Brother in the shape of HMG, to impose whatever is the fashionable thinking, and set mandatory limits on the amount of profit that this business is making?
...There are limited things government can do without negatively impacting the competiveness of individual businesses especially if we want to encourage exports. ...
But as things are, we have a huge trade deficit (over £100bn a year, or about £1,500 per head of population), and a large slice of what we "export" is in services rather than manufacturing. And of what little manufacturing we have left, some 80% of manufacturing SME's export nothing.
Therefore increasing the minimum wage to the living wage (for example) would have no significant effect on exports whatsoever. it's a fallacy.
What about the small businessman? The person who has an idea and who decides to back themselves, putting a lot of time and effort into growing the brand. Are they also amoral, when in the fullness of time they can enjoy the salary/profits that their endeavours brought them? The nice house in a decent area, enough in the bank to pursue an expensive hobby, or fund a private education for their children etc etc. In short, enjoy the fruits of their labours...
Fine.
rumpelstiltskin wrote:
Do we also disregard the jobs they may have created directly for their staff, or indirectly through the suppliers they use?
No.
rumpelstiltskin wrote:
Are you actually proposing that at some point in the success of this enterprise, you would expect Big Brother in the shape of HMG, to impose whatever is the fashionable thinking, and set mandatory limits on the amount of profit that this business is making?
No.
I am saying that it is not good enough to let businesses set their own moral framework. I am saying that if capitalism is to truly benefit society, then employment legislation and statutory business regulations etc are vital to curb unscrupulous business practices
Instead of going off one with an inflated straw man argument, why not address what I clearly meant?
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