Originally posted by One_more_turn
There are companies with people making 100K a year doing nothing other than surfing the web, engaging in office politics, and day-trading stocks.
There are companies with so many people in middle management that absolutely nothing gets done and all the best talents leave. IBM before Gerstner was a classic example.
Layoffs can scare unproductive people becoming more productive. It's not pretty, but it works in many instances.
The globalization has greatly expanded the supply of cheap labor ever since the 1980s, while the labor unions have stuck in the 19th century's nation state mindset. Unless you are in the top 20% of your profession, you are not gonna get much leverage against your employer these days.
There are companies with people making 100K a year doing nothing other than surfing the web, engaging in office politics, and day-trading stocks.
There are companies with so many people in middle management that absolutely nothing gets done and all the best talents leave. IBM before Gerstner was a classic example.
Layoffs can scare unproductive people becoming more productive. It's not pretty, but it works in many instances.
The globalization has greatly expanded the supply of cheap labor ever since the 1980s, while the labor unions have stuck in the 19th century's nation state mindset. Unless you are in the top 20% of your profession, you are not gonna get much leverage against your employer these days.
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