Do Businesses Hate Their Workers?
Naked Capitalism
11 Novembre 2009
In America, it isn’t hard to answer the question in the headline
“yes.” The oft recited, “Our employees are our greatest asset” is pure
Orwellian prattle; most companies treat employees as liabilities, doing
everything they can to minimize labor costs, getting rid of workers
whenever possible. And this now extends well up into the management
ranks, with most people who are still on the corporate meal ticket
assigned responsibilities that would have constituted 1.5 to two jobs a
decade ago.
And before readers argue that this is a necessary response to
globalization, the evidence does not support that view. If companies
were simply responding to tougher competition (in this case, lower cost
suppliers from overseas), you’d expect to pressure on wages AND
profits. Instead, we’ve seen wage stagnation (save at the very top)
with (pre bust) record profits.
If you look at past post-war expansion periods, the vast majority of
GDP growth went to labor, in the form of increased hiring and higher
wages. The post war average (pre the last upturn) was close to 60%; the
low was 55%. The jobless recovery lived up to its billing, with under
30% of GDP gains going to workers. By contrast, the portion of GDP
growth that went to profits was an all-time record.
Similarly, as any properly-trained MBA will tell you, companies can
compete on other axes besides cost: convenience, product features,
speed of delivery, other types of service. And US businesses have a
huge advantage: physical proximity to the biggest consumer market.
Offshoring and outsourcing create considerable rigidity and risk (more
coordination required, which increases the odds of snafus) Some
evidence supports the idea that outsourcing is a fad that US companies
embraced whether or not it fully made sense. Most companies find outsourcing to be overrated as a cost saver.
A former senior executive at Ethan Allen told me there was not reason
for the US to cede anywhere close to as much furniture manufacturing as
it did, particularly given the cost of shipping (often two ways, since
much of the raw materials come from North America). But in Ethan
Allen’s case, Wall Street wanted to hear they were manufacturing
overseas, and they complied.
Moreover, other countries, equally exposed to globalization, have
not seen a squeezing down on workers to the benefit of the top 1% to
anywhere the degree the US has, nor is the international pattern
consistent with globalization (or other common culprits) being the
driver. The Luxembourg Income Study (LIS) group put out a working paper
by Andrea Brandolini and Timothy Smeeding with some international
comparisons on income inequality, titled “Inequality Patterns in Western-Type Democracies: Cross-Country Differences and Time Changes”:
National experiences vary during the last four decades
and there is no one overarching common story. There was some tendency
for the disposable income distribution to narrow until the mid-1970s.
Then, income inequality rose sharply in the United Kingdom in the 1980s
and in the United States in the 1980s and 1990s (and still continuing),
but more moderately in Canada, Sweden, Finland and West Germany in the
1990s. Moreover, the timing and magnitude of the increase differed
widely across nations. Inequality did not show any persistent tendency
to rise in the Netherlands, France and Italy. Commonality seems to be
greater for market income inequality: in five of the six countries for
which we have data, we observe an increase in the 1980s and early 1990s
and a substantial stability afterwards.
Changing public monetary redistribution appears to be an important
determinant of the time pattern of the inequality of disposable
incomes. Changes in inequality do not exhibit clear trajectories, but
rather irregular movements, with more substantial changes often
concentrated in rather short lapses of time. Together with the lack of
a common international pattern, this suggests to look at explanations
based on the joint working of multiple factors which sometimes balance
out, sometimes reinforce each other, rather than to focus on
explanations centered on a single cause like deindustrialization,
skill-biased technological progress, or globalization. Identifying and
characterizing episodes and turning points in the dynamics of
inequality may reveal more fruitful than searching for overarching
general tendencies.
Other factors are that changes in policy have reduced the bargaining power of workers, and to a much greater degree than most realize. For instance, MIT economists Frank Levy and Peter Temin argued
that, “Institutions and norms affect the distribution of economic
rewards.” The paper combines some novel analyses with a
Depression-to-present-day narrative of evolving
labor-business-government relationships (one nice touch is a comparison
of starting salaries at Cravath versus that of average graduate degree
holders to illustrate the rise of “winner take all” inequalities).
Government also gave signals through tax structures and other
mechanisms of their view of the appropriate level of labor
compensation. For example, when Kennedy implemented tax cuts, the
Council of Economic Advisers announced wage and price guidelines that
indicated that labor should share pro rata. The paper describes other
ways that the government let businesses know that it expected
productivity gains to be shared with workers. Again, these measures
took the form of guidance rather than intervention, but also reflected
prevailing ideas of fairness.
By contrast, a piece today in Firedoglake (hat tip reader John D) illustrates how much values have changed, first with a graphic, and some scathing commentary:
Friday, a group of Trade Associations ran a full-page ad
in the New York Times demonstrating their loathing for the employees of
their members:
Expensive new mandates on businesses will result in lost jobs, lower wages, less flexibility and higher health care costs.
Let me translate that from scary talk to plain English. Business
will dump every last cent of the costs of health care on employees. No
business will give up a single penny of its profits to keep its workers
healthy. Anyone who wants health care has to pay for it at whatever
price the insurance companies want to charge, and business will
cooperate in shifting costs to workers. And there is nothing you can do
about it. The profits we suck out of your labor belongs to us, and you
don’t get any.
Sound a bit like class warfare? It’s not a surprising reaction when
one party keeps cutting itself the an overly large slice of the pie,
and then adding insult to injury through spurious rationalizations.
Source > Naked Capitalism | Nov 10