And The "Scrooge Award" Goes To... American Business!
One of the things that has gone wrong in the U.S. economy is that big American corporations are no longer sharing enough of their vast wealth with their rank-and-file employees.
How can we tell?
We can look at the following two charts.
The first chart shows that big American companies now have the highest profit margins in history.
The second chart shows that the companies are now paying the lowest wages in history as a percent of the economy.
Now, if you happen to be an owner of a big American corporation, you might view these charts as good news: You're coining it!
If you happen to be a rank-and-file employee, however--or someone hoping to be such an employee--this is bad news: You're sharing less than ever before in the success of American industry.
This situation, by the way, is only temporarily good news for company owners.Why?
Because the rank-and-file employees of America's corporations are also mainstream American consumers--the folks who account for ~70% of the spending in the economy.
Almost every dollar these folks earn in salaries gets spent--on food, clothing, houses, education, entertainment, cars, and other goods and services that big American companies produce.
So, if, instead of hoarding their wealth by hiking their profit margins ever higher, companies invested more in employees and equipment, they would help the whole economy.
And the companies would also, of course, help their employees--the people who are dedicating their lives to helping the companies earn such vast profits.
You might think that voluntarily helping employees by sharing more profits with them would be something corporations would be very eager to do.
After all, again, these employees are are dedicating their lives to making the companies so successful.
But, no.
The business-ethos pendulum in this country has now swung so far toward "profit maximization" that most American companies would never dream of voluntarily sharing more wealth with their employees.
These employees, after all, are not viewed as people. They're viewed as "costs"--cash outflows that leech financial value from owners.
It doesn't have to be this way. In a healthy capitalist ecosystem, companies serve several constituencies, not just owners. Namely, they serve:
- Owners
- Customers
- Employees, and
- Society
In today's version of American capitalism, however, too many companies are mostly serving only one constituency: Owners. "Profit maximization" is the number one--and, in many cases, only--priority.
A few days ago, on Business Insider, I confessed that I hoped American corporations would soon put their record-high profit margins to good use--by voluntarily deciding to hire more employees and pay them more.
Alas, I was branded a heretic.
I was called a "communist."
I was called a "liberal."
I was called--horrors--an Obama supporter.
These insults are all political. So it's worth noting that politics has nothing to do with this.
This is a private-sector issue, not a government issue. This is about persuading American companies to share more of their wealth with their employees, so the government doesn't have toget involved. As conservatives are fond of observing, the government cannot solve all the problems in this country. The private sector has to do it. So, it's time the private sector started doing it.
American companies are now so obsessed with profit maximization that they are content with millions of their full-time employees being below the poverty line (Walmart, Starbucks, McDonalds, et al).
Think about that for a minute.
Some of the richest, most revered companies in this country--companies that are currently generating record-high profits--pay their full-time employees so little that they're poor.
Even more depressing is the fact that concepts like "fairness" and "sharing" are now seen as evidence of bleeding-heart socialist tendencies--as though the only way to be a bona fide capitalist is to pay your employees as little as possible.
Capitalism doesn't have to be like that. It doesn't have to be all about "profit maximization." Companies can be very successful and their owners can do very well with the companies making only a reasonableprofit, not the highest-possible one.So it's time big American company owners voluntarily shared a bit more of their wealth with the people who help create it for them--by paying their employees more. This won't just help the employees. It will help the whole economy.
(And, for what it's worth, I say that not just as a writer but as the part owner of an American company. Business Insider doesn't yet have record profit margins--or any profit margin, for that matter--but we still pay our team as well as we can. And "profit maximization" will never be the primary goal here, at least while I am in charge.)
Enjou Chocolat | Partner | Retail, Corporate & Wholesale Chocolate Products & Gifts
11 年I've now gone back and just read through all of Henry Blodget's blog titles. Pretty clearly we have an unabashed liberal/communist, wrapped in a cloak of 'intellectual writer', who actually made millions during the .com boom and is happy to suck out more money from the rest of us now that he earned his.
Founder/Director
12 年Naive. If you don't like the pay, don't work there. No one makes someone work at a business. Many business owners will close their business before they let some unemployable-in-the-productive-economy government bureaucrat by force insist they WILL pay the company's employees/associates more without any other justification except someone who doesn't manage a business want to tell the one doing the work what to do. That is the new American idea; Telling others what to do, what to think, how to live.
Hardware Verification Engineer at Ethernity Networks
12 年I think that part of it is the fact that executives can be more efficient by using technology that they didn't have in the past. This allows them to simply fire workers. Best idea for the rest of us is to start our own businesses or buy into the bigger ones. The key looks like better education in business and technology so that more people can take advantage of growing technology.
Senior Executive Recruiter at KBRS
12 年Corporations will NEVER do this out of the goodness of their hearts! Their executives are paid to maximize profits as much as possible for the owners (and themselves) - not to be kind. Governments are the ONLY force greater than these corporations, with the ability to FORCE companies to treat their workers fairly, either by law or by taxation. It's time politicians started representing citizens instead of corporate donors, but until the money is removed from politics, sadly, it's not going to happen.
Head Tech. & Operations
12 年sadely, it's becoming global trend...