Most jobs shouldn't exist at all. The value captured by "firms" should instead be captured by the state and distributed peanut butter style to everyone.
I assure you there are people who live there who can afford to do so because they make enough money. Switching from startup salary to bigco at the same experience level in the same location doubled my comp. A few promotions later and it doubled again. That's when housing started to look affordable.
In my opinion, management should cull -1Xers, while also trying to reward top talent, even if it has it’s downsides.
However: I’m extremely hostile to overall wages as a fraction of revenue being held artificially low to increase the imbalance of payouts in favor of executives and shareholders. I think it’s appropriate to pay executives more because they bear a higher proportion of legal exposure than non-executives; I do not think it’s appropriate how most executives treat workers raises as a “cost center to be minimized” differently from their own pay as a “profit center to be maximized”. Similarly, I think that there’s a solid argument for paying your company’s long-term strategy cross-functional team according to having to bear the long-term responsibility and awareness of risks and so on. You can’t ask a base wage worker to care about your company; that’s a lot to ask, and requires an additional share of payment than just a day job would.
No disagreement about the harmful-when-present workers, though!
It doesn't motivate anyone to do anything above and beyond expectations, obviously.
Maybe I'm jaded, but I suspect this is the only reason.
Later points in the article about being more equitable don't seem valid, as companies generally did not care about that before.
Cost cutting seems to be the only idea executives have left.
I worked in aerospace in the early '90s. After the Soviet Union fell you were really happy when your raise was large enough to cover inflation.
Corpos are very sick right now, friends that stayed behind with +8y xp are very burnt out and annoyed having to deal with barely functional employees for a "peanut butter" raise.
My company not only gives percentage based bonuses but gives a higher percentage to higher salary earners. It pisses me off every year that the people who would be most positively affected by the extra money get less. But worse with the "performance" based raises where they have a fixed number of annual raise percentages means the unlucky sods who have shitty managers get less than inflation every year while I get higher every year.
Anecdotal, but I see people out of a job for years on end, saying they applied for 2000 jobs in the meantime, while others still keep getting recruiter messages on LinkedIn and can get a new position in a matter of weeks.
Granted, people who quit because of a low raise are probably having other problems as well, which maybe is beneficial for companies. But I still feel like this is companies investing in mediocrity.
They just keep their radar on and stay in touch. It's a whole job in itself.
Making things seem effortless is what makes them so attractive to begin with. Confidence and options come with the experience.
Corporate America apparently can't even make sandwiches correctly.
> There’s always a tension in organizations of how to how to balance the needs of your high performers while taking care of the entire group,”
I don't need you to consider my "needs." Consider your profits then consider my work. Pay me what it's worth.