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Behind Rising Inequality: More Unequal Companies

8 points| a5seo | 10 years ago |wsj.com | reply

11 comments

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[+] natmaster|10 years ago|reply
The whole premises of this article is incredibly disturbing. That people are actually mad that a company is able to produce so much new value that it dramatically increases the living standards of even its lowest paid employees.

Are people so delirious with envy that they want everyone to go back to the dark ages?

[+] edc117|10 years ago|reply
I read it a bit differently: these companies are doing so well, they're capturing a huge amount of their respective markets, to the point where they can easily afford to raise the salary on even their lowest paid employees. Likewise on the other end of the spectrum, companies on razor-thin margins are stuck pushing people towards minimum wage salaries.

You could pull a couple of conclusions from this article:

1. The patent system is a mess, and is helping drive huge profits for a small number of very large companies, as well as hindering others from competing or entering that market. They note the biggest examples are in tech and healthcare, which is not surprising.

2. The 'best' or 'smartest' workers congregating in a few very large companies that can afford to pay them very well is no surprise. Add in #1 and employees have less reason to leave and create competing services or businesses.

3. The ability of technology to be so easily replicated, plus #1 and #2, means we see few, if any, challengers to certain established markets.

All this is great...if you work at one of these companies.

[+] harkyns_ruins|10 years ago|reply
I don't think it's worth worrying about inequality at this stage, we've gone past the tipping point. The people that can make a change have no desire to do so, and they hold the reins tightly now. The rest are either frustrated and powerless, or dizzy on propaganda.

So I think we'll see more environmental destruction and species dying, more debt-slavery, and yet more war coming out of the US because the petrodollar is worth destroying our planet over, and a banking/finance system that is corrupted and uncontrollable. Unless there's some light at the end of the tunnel that I'm unaware of (aside from a train packed with a few people that think they earned their billions because of such hard work).

[+] Frondo|10 years ago|reply
Of course none of this is true. But, of course, what is true is that those who sit at home and do nothing ensure that nothing changes.

Well done, you.