So, the unions are getting militant and pushing for a minimum 5% pay rise. It's about bloody time. Over the past few years, the economy has boomed while wages have remained stagnant. How stagnant? Over the past five years the economy has grown by 20%, but wages have only increased by half that. The difference is reflected in soaring corporate profits, and consequently higher corporate tax receipts. And while wages are keeping pace with inflation in the long-term, there has been no compensation for increased productivity. Instead, the fruits of all of us working harder and smarter have been taken as profit by capitalists. To get an idea of how much has been taken, in the early 90's, wages and salaries were 55% of gross national income. Now that proportion has been reduced to 50%. The difference - 5% of everything we produce - now goes to business-owners. It's time workers took that 5% back. And if it can't be done now, in a time when unemployment is at a twenty-year low and businesses are screaming out for workers, then when?
Well, they see that the game is up. After years of promises, people finally want their jam. Squirming is a natural reaction...
ReplyDeleteAs for "framing", this is a simple issue of rewarding people who work harder. Employers constantly say "if you work harder, you will be paid more". But the dirty little secret of the NZ economy is that workers have been working harder - and employers have not lived up to their end of the bargain. Instead, the fruits of that increased productivity has gone straight into their pockets, or the pockets of their shareholders.
As for tax cuts, it's a non-starter. For better or worse, we've decided that people in our society will generally support themselves through the market, either by working for a business or owning one. Sadly, it seems our business-owners don't want to live up to this bargain either, and instead they want the government to let them off the hook and boost worker's in-the-hand incomes with a tax-cut, while they laugh all the way to the bank with record (and lower-taxed) profits and executive salaries. Fuck that for a joke. Those who live by the market can die by the market - and if the market suddenly doesn't seem like such a good idea when the shoe is on the other foot, they have noone but themselves to blame.
Yes, but a small business owner having invested a 6 figure sum over the past few years it is now a "luxury" to start making some profit.
ReplyDeleteI don't disagree that wealth distribution is important and we are increasing gradually ages across our small (14 people) company.
But it's a mistake to make gross generalisation about all companies - some of us have worked long and hard with substantial risk to make it. Getting a job would have been the easy (and probably more logical) road ...
OK, a follow-up post. In general I think the ideas in No Right Turn are a great balance to other "right aligned" blogs.
ReplyDeleteSo it's shame to see the response to Jordans post by Idiot/S. It's the same ol' mentality - business is bad, them vs us. It’s outright B/S and I find the sweeping statements offensive – in the same way that you obviously find the business mentality offensive. .
Tell you what, I presume from your righteous comments that you are one of the "workers" and I presume also that you have never started a business let alone run one.
Since the economy is booming give it a go - put your balls on the line and start making those fantastic profits. As a business owner you have nothing to lose – in fact you can work even less than if you have a real job, there is no financial risk, and you’ll have a huge expense account. Of course you’ll have to get a few clients and you may need some staff, and you’ll have a number of taxation obligations to meet - but they are minor issues.
And then promise me you’ll come back to this post in 5 years time and honestly post those same comments. If you did so I’d be fairly confident in calling you a liar.
I don’t disagree that there are some ratbag employers out there – we have laws to help deal with that and while they do place pressure on employers and make our life hell at time I don’t complain about them – they are there for a reason. And of course employees do also have an option – they can leave their job for a better paying one.
This is a complex issue and I think it is a shame that it gets debated with some emotive rhetoric by people who have little experience in what they are talking about. Jordons blog is testimony to that.
as an owner operator you are both a worker and a capitalist quite likely you are mroe of the former. The "evil capitalists" are the people who make money only out of money (capital) ie anyone who buys a house and gets capital gains or buys shares (particularly index funds) or similar.
ReplyDeleteLawrence: statistics such as average wage and labour productivity growth or corporate tax (and therefore profit) growth are by their nature generalisations - and looking at them, the argument is a powerful one: on the average, workers have been ripped off. And if this isn't true of your particular business, you'd better hope your employees know and appreciate it.
ReplyDeleteAs for small business owners in general, I expect them to have less direct trouble with strike action, but they'll still have to cope with wage pressure simply from competition for workers, and this will no doubt drive a few under. Sucks for them, but that's markets for you...
Genius: spoken like a true Marxist :)
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