is it inherently wrong that a minority has control over the workplace? — Judaka
The defining characteristic of capitalism is the contract made between a private citizen who owns a place of production with another private citizen to exchange labour for a wage. — Judaka
The defining characteristic of capitalism is the contract made between a private citizen who owns a place of production with another private citizen to exchange labour for a wage. — Judaka
but the power in the relationship is always with the employer. — Judaka
Labor contracts are a feature of capitalism, but hardly the single defining one. In any case, a lot of work today is remote and online so this "place of production" is becoming an anachronism. Work often doesn't need to be done in an office. In many cases employees just need their own computers and network to get work done, this isn't a 1950s factory. Work is changing very rapidly and increasingly virtual. — BitconnectCarlos
What if there's many employers and few employees? What if the employees are strongly organized? What if they're financially secure and don't need work? This is definitely not true. If the wages aren't there you're not going to recruit the right people. There are definitely certain labor markets where things are tilted in favor of the employee. — BitconnectCarlos
The business is owned by the employer, the employee offers the employer labour for wages. — Judaka
The employee may be satisfied or dissatisfied with their wage, they still have very little or no control over anything to do with the business that employs them nor over the type of work they'll be doing. — Judaka
IF we take it for granted that the employer actually is the rightful owner of the place of employment, and that the various obligations traded in employment contracts are within the power of the parties to them to create, then the "libertarian" analysis could hold up. But how exactly does rightful ownership get determined? And exactly what rights -- liberties, claims, immunities, and especially powers -- does ownership of something convey? If ownership is determined by use or convention, like meaning in language is, then it seems ludicrous to suppose that the workers who use the means of production are not either automatically its rightful owners because they use it, or that they (and we all, the mostly-workers of the world) truly agree to the convention that their employer is the rightful owner. And if it is not within the power of the employer and employees to create the obligations that are traded in the contract, then the contract simply isn't valid, regardless of who owns what. — Pfhorrest
We shouldn't treat this like an inevitable feature of capitalism. I've worked for start ups where I have equity in the project which makes me a part-owner of it and some measure of decision-making power. Then again, yes, the bulk of the decision making power is going to come from the founders and the higher ups because they're actually the ones driving the project and they're doing a lot more work than me. They also know a hell of a lot more than me or the vast majority of people for that matter about the project. — BitconnectCarlos
Well do they even want governance control? When I worked at a department store in college all I wanted was to collect a wage and leave. We shouldn't immediately conclude that everyone wants to spend extra time in meetings or learning about potential decisions or projects in the company (especially ones in other areas of the company where you're not involved.) If you are interested in something more you'll probably have to work your way up or talk to management. — BitconnectCarlos
In all organizations you get more decision-making power when you climb up the ladder. But you also take on more responsibilities which can be seen as restricting and will take up your time. The idea that workers must be entitled to strong governance authority simply upon agreeing to do work for the employer is ridiculous. How much decision-making power are we to give a complete newcomer who just joined up? As a founder you're the one who started it and gets to make the rules. If you want to start a business and make it a complete democracy where anyone you hire gets an equal voting opinion then go for it — BitconnectCarlos
but it is not in their hands because of any other reason than the fact that they own the business. It's theirs to run into the ground incompetently or sell or do whatever they please with. If the business is better off this way then that's an argument you could certainly make. — Judaka
I'm not really sure about that, I guess some would and some wouldn't but I couldn't guess what the majority of people would think was ideal. — Judaka
I'm struggling to determine the tone of your message, are you saying it's a matter of earning your way, having the suitable expertise, the rights of the founder or something else? — Judaka
For those who see the employer-employee dynamic as immoral, I guess they'd want to shut it all down, not just make their own business that does things differently. — Judaka
On what basis would it stop being ridiculous for a worker to have a say? What about after they've been at the company after a certain period of time or other pre-requisites for having a say? — Judaka
How do you feel about worker co-ops or similar alternatives to state ownership?
Is this issue the defining point at which one determines whether capitalism should be reformed or replaced? — Judaka
If we were to force workplaces to be democratic then we wouldn't have the same capitalist way of starting a business. — Judaka
Your example of starting a capitalist business and then hiring a single person and having it all be ruined is stupid. — Judaka
Isn't the status quo that the means of production are recognised by all relevant parties to indeed belong to the owner and the employees don't consider themselves to be the owners. If the business or its assets are sold, that all profit will go to the owner is everyone's expectation. The choice to do that is with the owner. The workers of supermarkets and stores don't see themselves as the rightful owners. Also, the terms of the employment are recognised by employer, employee, the government and all parties. It seems I don't understand what you're saying or I'm just missing the point — Judaka
Ok, explain to me how businesses get started then. Give me a better model. — BitconnectCarlos
Why is it stupid? Did I misrepresent your position somehow? Does your employee not deserve equal representation? Tell me what was wrong with it. — BitconnectCarlos
Do you lean towards Democratic Socialism then? — Judaka
What are your priorities? How do we measure success? — Judaka
If employer-employee relations can be that the employer has absolute control and authority and agency and the employee is just there to receive a check then that's how we might arrive at the conclusion — Judaka
The employer is paying the employee for a job. If I offer you a job for $100/hr is that me being oppressive? Would I be making you my slave now? Is that how jobs work? I'm sure there's a job to be a slave out there but most aren't. I feel like you're talking about low-level jobs here, is that it? You're talking about the type of jobs.
You just don't like how certain employers treat their employees which is natural; employers can be dicks! Not all are though. — BitconnectCarlos
If you offered me a job for $100/hr it'd be because you believed it'd help you make a profit, — Judaka
The employer has absolute authority to determine what he does with his business and what shall be done with the profits, again, a basic principle of capitalism. — Judaka
It's fine that employees don't get to make any decisions at the companies they work at, ideal even. — Judaka
Do you mean a "good" capitalist? Why is your adjective "true"? — Judaka
That is true capitalism, that is how capitalism operates. — Judaka
I dislike it when people slap "true" on something and then insert their ideals as if the status quo is a perversion rather than the norm. — Judaka
Has capitalism been misunderstood? — Judaka
What problems can be truly ascribed to capitalism and which constitute a perversion? — Judaka
Isn't it inherently true that within the business, the employer must be given extensive rights to do with his business as he sees fit for capitalism to function correctly? — Judaka
How many regulations and rules can be effectively enforced and to what extent do they really change anything? — Judaka
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