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el0hel | 3 years ago

Having entered adulthood in the US during the Great Recession and being laid off the second it benefited the company (despite easily turning a profit), I cannot understand your position. My grandparents had hefty pensions and their careers grew _with_ their companies. Modern management practices dictate short-term margin as a priority meaning high-salaried employees are considered risks before boons. That, coupled with the well-known fact that salaries do not keep pace with CoL, it is nonsensical _not_ to take the same approach - always be on the lookout for your next step at any time.

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dlhavema|3 years ago

Pensions are long gone in most small "startuppy" companies. That takes away one big motivator to stay.

el0hel|3 years ago

Agreed. That was a large source of "loyalty" for older generations. My wife's father will retire soon with a generous pension - one of the last of the factory workers who had a pension. Employees aren't loyal and that is largely a self-inflicted issue.