• @qwertyqwertyqwerty
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    1411 year ago

    Don’t forget the company meetings where leadership says things like “this is the best quarter we have ever had”, along with “we need to work harder to stay competitive”. Sigh.

    • @[email protected]
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      811 year ago

      “Despite making record profits, we still didn’t hit EBITDA this year, therefore no bonuses or raises. Merry Christmas!”

      • r00ty
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        471 year ago

        That’s not true. The senior management team will be getting raises in line with inflation and also huge bonuses for those record profits. Not to mention their share value increasing.

  • @AllonzeeLV
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    1 year ago

    And remember, 10 years from now, you’ll be nostalgic for this shitty time.

    If a climate change superstorm, AI, riots, famine, etc haven’t gotten around to killing you yet at least. Lucky dead bastards.

    • @queermunist
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      131 year ago

      Hopefully I can replace myself with an AI and then she can deal with this shit.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      I remind myself of this every time I start feeling nostalgic.

      Cool old C10 truck? Wait a minute those things were $200 any day of the week when I was 18 (because they were and still are trash)

      • @AllonzeeLV
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        41 year ago

        Because it’s better than keeping it bottled up and no one in my life wants to hear it.

  • @Mr_Dr_Oink
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    501 year ago

    When theres literally people in the UK screaming about NHS workers getting a 5% pay rise when NHS workers earn significantly less than they would doing the same work in the private sector and considering that people actually get free healthcare from the people wjo got this pitiful raise is absolutely soul destroying. Especially when you take this meme into account.

  • 爪卂ᗪ尺ㄩᎶ卂
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    381 year ago

    You guys need to unionize and fight for raises that exceed the inflation rate. Here in Brazil, we have this in almost every type of labor.

    Five years ago, the right-wing began dismantling the unions’ monetization system in an attempt to break them, and they also raised the retirement age. However, the unions are still doing their job, and every year we receive a raise above inflation.

    The current left-wing government has already said that they are working to recover a monetization system for unions. They are studying a way to implement this in a manner that will make it difficult for a future government to repeal.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      Some industries like programming are not quite as simple to get unionization going. Pretty much only public sector jobs have unions when it comes to programming. I wish that weren’t the case. On the flip side though, the abundance of programming jobs (when there isn’t a damn near tech recession) makes switching jobs to get a huge raise pretty clearly the way to go.

      • @stonedemoman
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        41 year ago

        You seem to be forgetting the 10 other reasons why relative wages are falling behind aside from ignorance

        • artisanrox
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          11 year ago

          In many places they wouldn’t be falling behind if dirt poor people weren’t frothy-mouthed cheering for trust fund inheritor babies who only pay attention to hot escorts and dad’s hedge fund lawyers.

          • @stonedemoman
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            81 year ago

            The cult of personality that adheres to the philosophy of being “self-made” doesn’t help, but anti-union practices by the US’ ruling class have been exercised since the industrial revolution, and meanwhile government has hardly ever stepped in to regulate or break monopolies.

  • artisanrox
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    301 year ago

    "We’re making record profits!!!..

    …No Steve, you can’t have a raise. Here’s a bag of Fritos!"

    • @RagingRobot
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      1 year ago

      We made record profits but we projected unattainable goals so you can’t have a raise

    • I Cast Fist
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      41 year ago

      Steve, if you keep complaining with your coworkers, you’ll be fired. You know what, you’re fired. And your coworkers, too, the company can’t keep up with your expenses.

  • panCatQ
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    291 year ago

    Many employers in my country are now just giving a raise to their senior executives , management and above , while keeping the low level employee wages stagnant !

  • @[email protected]
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    281 year ago

    Job hopping again for this reason. Really wish employers would pay people to stay, unfortunately employer loyalty is non existant.

  • thatoneguy
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    1 year ago

    It would be funny if it didn’t hurt so much. Rent is too high, grocery bill has me intermittent fasting, and I walk/bike instead of driving now. Shit is rough out here.

  • idunnololz
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    261 year ago

    You guys are getting raises?

    • @scottywh
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      31 year ago

      I knew someone had to have said it… Lol… I don’t even need to scroll further to see if there was anyone else.

  • CocoLopez
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    231 year ago

    9.1? Jajajajajajajajaja (laughs in argentinian 120% yearly inflation rate)

      • CocoLopez
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        51 year ago

        Not even sure. But I have a theory. We, argentinians, are evolving to the most resilient and resistance human beings in order to conquer the cosmos. Or, or… We’ve down this shit for so long we can almost breath inflation. I can only imagine what you can breed between an argentinian and a venezuelan. Maybe SON-GOKU.

      • @SuddenDownpour
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        21 year ago

        The productive capabilities of the country haven’t ceased to exist. As long as that remains true, inflation is going to create wacky, uncertain, annoying situations, but it doesn’t have to provoke severe destitution as long as other safety nets are in place.

      • CocoLopez
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        1 year ago

        Not even sure. But I have a theory. We, argentinians, are evolving to the most resilient and resistance human beings in order to conquer the cosmos. Or, or… We’ve been down this shit for so long we can almost breath inflation. I can only imagine what you can breed between an argentinian and a venezuelan. Maybe SON-GOKU.

  • UltraMagnus0001
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    1 year ago

    More like greed. Inflation because they have record profits, pay their employees less *(relative to inflation )and charge more for their products

    • @[email protected]
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      -81 year ago

      You think inflation is due to record profits?

      And by pay employees less, what do you mean? Like relative to inflation? Or is there a company that actually lowered hourly wages?

      I can sort of agree with the charge more part I guess. But it’s pretty obvious that inflation is largely caused by increasing the money supply. This has been shown repeatedly throughout history and isn’t really debatable unless I’m missing something. It’s sort of like how the more slices you cut a pizza into, the smaller the slices become. Charging more for the pizza, paying the pizza employees less or the pizza company making more money doesn’t impact slice size unless they increase the number of slices or the size of the pizza itself.

      • artisanrox
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        01 year ago

        paying the pizza employees less

        so the employees can literally not pay their bills and you run a billion dollar pizza company.

        Might want to take this all back.

        • @[email protected]
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          -41 year ago

          Haha what? This was a hypothetical comparison of the number of pizza slices per pizza and inflation. These pizza employees do not exist, but if they did I would support them being paid more not less.

          Did you actually think I ran a pizza company?

          • artisanrox
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            21 year ago

            No, I’m saying your little metaphor is terrible and the main driver of inflation, currently, is literally businesses not wanting to pay people.

              • artisanrox
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                11 year ago

                It does when the price of things goes up (especially on essentials) and creates profits and no one is paid enough to live but creates those profits.

                If my employer refuses to pay me a living wage even though they can, I can’t magically buy a new car if I need one, especially if the prices on cars went up by, example, 30%. ESPECIALLY if my employer refuses to pay me more.

                It’s inflated TWICE actually because the price goes up normally, and again because my pay did not increase. My pay actually took a loss because it didn’t get raised enough to be proportional to x% inflation.

                • @[email protected]
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                  1 year ago

                  This is why rightoids don’t care what leftists have to say about the economy fam. It doesn’t matter to them if your overall point is correct when you go around redefining words to fit the agenda just because you don’t know the actual terms.

                  You could have tossed out terms like purchasing power, cost of living, or even just slapped “effective” in front of inflation to sound like you remember your high school economics but instead you decided to call a deflationary pressure double inflation.

  • @[email protected]
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    141 year ago

    My wife just got a 4% pay increase but then the insurance premium went up by 11%. So she really got an 7% pay demotion.

  • @[email protected]
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    141 year ago

    It’s almost as though the governments should do their jobs and fucking put cost controls. Seriously, we need some new economic thought/ practice. Just like how several generation’s ago they figured out that wages are sticky, they need to put cost caps or restrictions to stop this shit. Instead of cutting the money supply and people’s lifelines, they need to fucking tell businesses to cut the crap and stop the bullshit. Since then pandemic every industry feels like they can price gouge and get away with it. It’s fucking ridiculous. If you put a stop to that, then you have some hope of resigning in inflation.

    • @[email protected]
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      61 year ago

      I’d rather have a windfall tax that taxes some high percentage of all profits beyond a certain percentage in order to disincentivize this sort of profiteering.

    • artisanrox
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      41 year ago

      I’m not really for price caps but I’m very into billionaires taxed to pay public funds since they literally don’t want to pay people to work.

      • @ChairmanMew
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        71 year ago

        True. What we need is to remove the underlying problem, which is the profit motive to overcharge and underpay. That is, democratic worker-owned companies, answerable to employees instead of shareholders

        • @[email protected]
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          01 year ago

          Those companies exist but are generally not competitive in terms of the product delivered to the consumer, largely because of a lack of ability to adapt to serve the needs of the market. They’re focused on their employees instead of their businesses and end up getting outcompeted for a variety of reasons.

          • @quicksand
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            31 year ago

            Except for Winco. Everyone I know loves Winco

            • @[email protected]
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              21 year ago

              WinCo is mostly employee owned but is run as a privately held business by its board of directors, not the workers. It’s run like a normal company, more or less, although employee ownership does mean employees have more of a voice when it comes to business decisions.

      • @Doomsider
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        -31 year ago

        Price caps set to low cause this. Luckily we have a lot of data available nowadays and with AI a more managed economy should be a no brainer. Pretending reigning in price gouging will cause shortages is disingenuous. Although the best way to handle this would be to increase competition.

        • @[email protected]
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          21 year ago

          Any price cap on a good that can be transported to markets which pay more will cause shortages in the market which pays less. Basic economics.

          If you want to rein in price gouging the best way to do that is with competition and antitrust actions.

          • @Doomsider
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            -11 year ago

            Basic economics says this only happens when the cap is set to low but it is entirely possible to adjust accordingly as seen in systems like universal healthcare. Thanks for the sophomoric understanding though it really added to the conversation /s

            • @[email protected]
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              -31 year ago

              Universal healthcare systems don’t sell a transportable good. Emergency healthcare isn’t exportable. Wheat is.

              • @Doomsider
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                1 year ago

                If you are starving then the price of wheat is not very elastic, but do carry on. Whatever is clever.

                • @[email protected]
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                  -21 year ago

                  Starvation isn’t a widespread issue in either the US or the EU. We aren’t spending 80% of the typical family income on food in either location. This isn’t South Sudan or a nation similarly undeveloped, where families are scratching at subsistence farming.

                  If you capped the price of bread at, say, $1 a loaf, then bakeries would want to sell for less in order for retailers to sell for that one dollar figure. Which means baking loads for a percentage of that $1, which means reducing the local price of wheat to match. In a location where the price of a loaf of bread is $2 a loaf, then they can pay more or less twice as much for wheat.

                  Basic supply-demand equation. Econ 101.

                  The point here is that if you break the supply-demand equation by instituting a cap on the price of bread, you’re moving the supply down while moving the demand up as more people seek to buy bread and it becomes a much less attractive product to bake and sell. Barring subsidies to producers and retailers to support the price cut - at which point, we may as well just centrally distribute bread - then there will be unfulfilled demand, since the price cannot rise enough to motivate supply to meet demand.

                  Which means shortages. Very basic econs.

                  A price cap moves the measurement point in that graph away from equilibrium and shifts both lines to the left. The gap in between is unfulfilled demand.