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Originally posted by colbyforce
Especially for a person with a degree or any other specialized schooling.
Originally posted by v1rtu0s0
reply to post by wishful1gnorance
I'm sorry to hear about your situation, but unfortunately, you're not the exception to the rule.
And that's the problem. As time goes on, your scenario becomes more common, and the greed becomes unstoppable. Eventually, something has to give, and I'm afraid the common folk have already given everything they've got...
The company also offers very good benefits for a retailer, including health care, 401(k) contributions and the chance to buy company stock, as well as Apple products, at a discount,” so including benefits may offset some of the discrepancy between pay by Apple and pay by other companies. The information necessary to calculate this offset is unavailable, but it is not believable that these benefits fully or even significantly make up such a large shortfall in wages.
The discrepancy between Apple’s profits/executive pay and its compensation to its workers is a particularly glaring example of what is occurring in the wider economy. The gap between CEO compensation and that of a typical worker is now 231-to-one, where it used to be just 58.5-to-one in 1989. Corporate profits are now higher as a share of corporate-sector income than in any year since the early 1940s when we had a War Labor Board consciously suppressing wage growth.
Originally posted by Bone75
Originally posted by colbyforce
Especially for a person with a degree or any other specialized schooling.
So you think someone who has furthered their "education" deserves more money than the guy who built the school? That kind of misplaced value is exactly what's causing these problems.
Originally posted by Rockpuck
reply to post by v1rtu0s0
$12 to do a job that a monkey could do?
And?
Innovation and good products IS what makes Apple profitable. I pay a premium for my Apple products because the alternatives don't fit my needs. I know I pay a premium, and I don't really care. Should we force companies to pay low level employees more? NO ... because that just raises what the "poverty threshold" is. If we had not raised the minimum wage by 70% since 2007 then $12 an hour would be a GOOD wage. I used to make $8 in high school and that was a lot of money.. everyone else was making $5.25. Now it's not even minimum wage.. and everyone I used to work with at the same job makes the same because the company couldn't raise it's prices. Decent jobs became minimum wage jobs....... all because of Government and the voters know jack @%@! about economics.
Originally posted by Kovenov
From this it's obvious that in no time in U.S. history have wages & salaries been higher. And oddly enough the curve was parabolic (roughly) until on/about 2000, but whatever.
Looking at this data and the claim "wages at all-time low" is incoherent at this point. Unless I am misinterpreting the data, I can't imagine how the "wages at all-time low" claim stands. Perhaps it stands in terms of Apple's numbers, but as a measure of the economy (per Fed Reserve Economic Data) the claim is incoherent.]