So should companies be allowed to harass their employees into quitting in order to save on severance fees? — VagabondSpectre
The primary targets were probably older retired-in-place types. Young workers cost less and they work harder.
A company that does that has a poor relationship with the community. — frank
Betrayal of what exactly? — frank
The roots of the case date back about two decades, to a period when the company, then known by the name France Télécom, was still part of the government's Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications. Once a state-run monopoly, the company sold off most of its shares and underwent a process of privatization in the late 1990s and early 2000s.
That process left its employees in an uncomfortable situation: still enjoying the strong employment protections of civil servants, but working for a management structure newly constrained by the marketplace and looking to shed costs to compete.
When someone agrees to work for a company, there is an unspoken assumption that the employer won't begin harassing the new employee to death the moment it becomes financially beneficial to do so. — VagabondSpectre
P.S: in terms of laws, there are all kinds of harassment statutes, a number of which specifically apply to working conditions and treatment of employees. That's what makes it criminal. — VagabondSpectre
I'd call that a basic duty of care. Luckily, it usually tends to gel well with the profit motive as workplace suicides tend to be bad for business. — Baden
I think you just made that up. — frank
The idea of a social contract is pretty useful here — VagabondSpectre
Actually from what I've read, the longer the shift the lower the efficiency (work per time).You could get efficiency gains by [...] extending the working week to 60 hours — Baden
It's that malice of intent, and the harm that resulted, that generates the strongest ethical and legal issue. — VagabondSpectre
But that's not too hard to hide from onlookers. I wonder how the French court went about weighing the evidence. — frank
and subsequently leaves them liable for the ensuing damages — VagabondSpectre
Amazon seems to be doing rather well with mistreatment.I would expect that in many cases, overall efficiency of production coincides with worker well-being, because healthy, happy people do better work, and poorer people spend more of their income so paying more to the poor and working classes instead of the upper classes means more demand and higher profits for businesses, and so on. The people on top treating the people on bottom poorly is irrational behavior that fails to look at what a detriment it makes in the big picture, because being rich and powerful doesn't necessarily mean you're a smart, systemic, forward-thinker. — Pfhorrest
Amazon seems to be doing rather well with mistreatment. — Coben
I know it was callous. It also happens to be true. That said, I'd rather be in a society that reaches out with compassion to people who are in pain than one that sees them as superfluous (even though we probably all are.) — frank
I once heard that when workers unionize, they just get two asshole bosses instead of one since unionizers tend to be belligerent buttheads. — frank
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