Quote:
Originally Posted by case
Yes, I agree to a point. A lot of wages for lower and middle income earners have have remained stagnant. And not because they don't work hard enough. But not all have been this way. And not for as long as it seems. For instance, my husband makes significantly more than he did 10 years ago, but he has the same title and does the same thing. There are some in his field that make more then he does and some that make less. Now, if someone came in and said "Hey, XXX is the new limit to what Sys Analysts can make" and it was less than his wage? Yeah, he and everyone who makes what he makes or more get a cut in pay. Sucks. So, how motivated is he going to be to get better at what he does? What kind of pride will people have in their work if there is no hope for advancement? I agree that the salaries are out of wack and I know that was anecdotal, but I believe there are a lot of those people out there, too.
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The way I look at is this, if the wage disparity is addressed as a % of what the top can earn over the bottom, then the majority of the workforce would actually enjoy higher pay. The only ones who would suffer, if you can even call it that, are the ones who are making really, really high salaries. I honestly believe if the company shared the wealth more evenly with the workforce, they would have a happier, more loyal workforce who would be willing to work harder to make good things happen. A happy, respected, well-paid employee is a GOOD employee. And unhappy, disrespected, under-paid employees, not so much.