• @shalafi
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    -121 year ago

    That’s actually rather easy if you work for a publicly traded corp, at least to ballpark it.

    Company profits / total workers. (<-this seems facile, what am I missing?)

    OTOH, beware comparisons of pay scales.

    “CEOs make too much!”

    Do the math. CEO pay is typically 1/100th of a penny earned, sometimes 1/1000th, not a drop in the bucket. Don’t matter. When I was a kid, sports star pay was the thing to rage about. LOL, haven’t seen a single lemming comment about that. Whatever.

    I don’t make enough!”

    And that’s very likely true, but you cost far more than you think. Good rule of thumb? Double your pay, that’s what you actually cost. You make $15/hr.? Company probably pays $30, or a bit more. Company has to pay worker’s comp insurance, taxes, benefits, unemployment insurance, payroll processing fees, all that and more.

    SOURCE: Worked IT for a payroll company, got the inside scoop.

    • @AtariDump
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      111 year ago

      but you cost far more than you think.

      When companies pay peanuts compared to the C-Suite AND post record profits each year, I think the company could give me more than a 3% raise.

      • @Zoboomafoo
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        -51 year ago

        It’s impressive how deftly you avoid the comment to spout your own opinion

      • @shalafi
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        -51 year ago

        Well, that goes without saying. I was commenting on the idea of “fair market value”.

    • Uriel238 [all pronouns]
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      91 year ago

      If you have to underpay your workers to make enough profit, then your business model sucks, and your company should fail.

      Economics 1B