I would like a law
It is a simple law.
No employee of any company at any level can make more than 100 times the lowest paid employee of that company.
You're paying someone $20,000 a year, then you can make 2 million a year. Want a raise? You have to raise the salaries of the lowest paid employees.
Now, tell me why you don't like my law.
No employee of any company at any level can make more than 100 times the lowest paid employee of that company.
You're paying someone $20,000 a year, then you can make 2 million a year. Want a raise? You have to raise the salaries of the lowest paid employees.
Now, tell me why you don't like my law.
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Counts as part of your yearly compensation.
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You'll have companies claiming access to work machines, office supplies, parking, etc will all become "benefits".
So now that guy making nothing in data entry looks like he's making a ton more because you could even go as crazy far as to claim his cubicle space a benefit. So you write rent off too.
Like I said before this idea is nice, but the level of detail that'd have to go into closing all the potential loopholes is insane.
Because I'm sitting here constantly coming up with new little ideas. So you KNOW bigtime CEOs would have even more to say about it.
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I don't think that'd last long in the realm of the marketplace or in the courts. And it is a fairly simple loophole to close anyway. I don't think the level of detail to close the loopholes is all that bad when compared with some other legislation out there.
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That's asking for a lot of regulation that has to be malleable enough to change with inflation rates. Its just a big issue.
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Nothing has to change with inflation rate. That's built in. All it requres is that the lowest paid person make no more than 1/100th the highest paid person.
And we're talking about salaries of millions of dollars a year here. And we're talking about perhaps .1% of the population. Everyone else gets a raise.