madmallard wrote:
The problem with equating the mismanagement of a corporate body with the mismanagement of a union is that there are laws severly restricting how a corporation operates that they must abide by first. Even more restriction if the company is publicly held. Unions do not have an equivalent layer of restrictions to parallel these, nor are unions accountable to anywhere near the scale of people.
(Cut off DIVX discussion as it's not pertinent while very interesting. I live in Richmond. Was very close the team who ran the numbers on the first round of layoffs. Am now married to one of the former directors of HR. The Carmax guys were very, very smart.)
Legal boundaries do not have a bearing on good vs. bad management. The government is not telling a union to defend a crap worker. The government is not telling a corporation to run itself poorly and take ill advised risks with shareholder investments.
Again, blaming the union for being the sole reason a company goes under is over simplifying and self-serving to those who like to blame the worker. The worker is not the guy saying the Volt is a great car and will save GM. They're just building them.
Hence my example about Circuit City. The teenager selling cellphones didn't decide to invest milllions into DIVX or stop selling appliances. Why blame him? He might have helped the company go under by giving poor customer service but he surely wasn't involved in more strategic decisions.
Crashing a company is a team effort. The suits need to make good decisions. The workers need to work and improve efficiency. Talk about over simplifying! That's me over simplifying right there.
Datsun1500 wrote:
If the CEO makes 40 times the lineman, become a CEO. There is nothing holding you back from doing that. The CEO did not wake up one day as a CEO. It takes effort and sacrifice. We all have the same opportunity in this country. Some go with it, others don't. It's not fair to just bitch because someone else made it happen for himself.
No one is bitching about not being a CEO. A worker was rightfully complaining when his pay was cut in half. I would complain just as any one of us would. It's not the right way to treat someone who's worked for you for even 6 months. Also keep in mind, workers in manufacturing jobs tend to have more tenure than workers in other industries.
"Within the private sector, workers in manufacturing had the highest median tenure among the major industries (6.1 years)."
Employee Tenure in 2010
So this guy most likely had his pay cut after working for 6+ years. Not knowing any other details such as worker performance, average pay in the geographic area, etc I'd say that's a pretty bum deal.
I think he has a right to be upset. He agreed to work that job, forgoing other opportunities, for that pay rate. After an unspecified length of time that corporation changed the deal, by 50%. What if the contracted provider of steel for those cars raised prices to that automanufacturer by 50%? Do you think they would meekly accept the new terms? Sheeeeit.
So the why do you expect a worker to accept a 50% pay cut without complaint when no one else would? Because he's a Union member? That logic breaks down pretty fast.
Let's get to your main point. Economic mobility. The American dream of being able to be whatever you want to be via hard work and sacrifice.
The Brookings institute wrote a good article on it.
America Needs More Economic Mobility
Turns out that there are quite a few factors determining your final resting place when you try to mobilize up the economic ladder.
"Kids from families in the bottom 20 percent of the income distribution are nearly five times as likely to wind up in the bottom 20 percent as kids from families in the top 20 percent. Similarly, children from other advanced countries are less likely to be stuck at the bottom of the income distribution than children in the U.S."
That report is written with kid gloves. They're trying to be very positive so it should be an easier read for some.
My points being, the guy quoted at the beginning of this thread has a right to complain as he was treated unfairly. He was sold a bill of good which suddenly changed midstream. I'd be ticked off too.
Also, becoming a CEO is attainable for anyone. Just like winning the lottery. It can happen. Your chances are much greater for becoming a CEO if you already come from money than if you're dirt poor. Currently, economic mobility in the U.S. is at a very low point.