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Even after eight years of economic recovery and steady private-sector job growth, wages for most Americans have hardly budged. It is tempting to think that wage stagnation is intractable, a result of long-term trends, like automation and globalization, that government is powerless to do anything about.
In fact, a growing body of evidence pins much of the blame on a specific culprit, one for which proven legal weapons already exist. But they are not being used.
The culprit is “monopsony power.”
Economists have struggled over that question for years now, as wage growth has stagnated and more of the nation’s income has shifted from the pockets of workers into the bank accounts of business owners. Since 1979, inflation-adjusted hourly pay is up just 3.41 percent for the middle 20 percent of Americans while labor’s overall share of national income has declined sharply since the early 2000s. There are lots of possible explanations for why this is, from long-term factors like the rise of automation and decline of organized labor, to short-term ones, such as the lingering weakness in the job market left over from the great recession. But a recent study by a group of labor economists introduces an interesting theory into the mix: Workers’ pay may be lagging because the U.S. is suffering from a shortage of employers.
In the "behind-the-scenes" world of Corporate America [SUP](tm) [/SUP]it's been well-understood for a while that businesses can get away with exercising monopsony power over wages and salaries. Don't misunderstand: it's unlikely that most employers and business people were or are aware of the term, but the practices the term names have nevertheless been de rigeur for surviving in our contemporary economic environs.
To put it briefly, monopsony is established when there are fewer buyers for something than might be optimal for competition on the buyer side to increase prices. The price in question, in this case, is the price of labor. Comparatively few buyers, and blatant practices of those buyers, have put artificial downward pressure on wages and salaries.
I've been pointing this out for a while. It's good to see at least someone reporting on it:
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/02/28/opinion/corporate-america-suppressing-wages.html
https://slate.com/business/2018/01/a-new-theory-for-why-americans-cant-get-a-raise.html
And for those who like to actually read, here's a decent paper (linked in the NY Times article) on the topic:
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3129221
In the "behind-the-scenes" world of Corporate America [SUP](tm) [/SUP]it's been well-understood for a while that businesses can get away with exercising monopsony power over wages and salaries. Don't misunderstand: it's unlikely that most employers and business people were or are aware of the term, but the practices the term names have nevertheless been de rigeur for surviving in our contemporary economic environs.
To put it briefly, monopsony is established when there are fewer buyers for something than might be optimal for competition on the buyer side to increase prices. The price in question, in this case, is the price of labor. Comparatively few buyers, and blatant practices of those buyers, have put artificial downward pressure on wages and salaries.
I've been pointing this out for a while. It's good to see at least someone reporting on it:
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/02/28/opinion/corporate-america-suppressing-wages.html
https://slate.com/business/2018/01/a-new-theory-for-why-americans-cant-get-a-raise.html
And for those who like to actually read, here's a decent paper (linked in the NY Times article) on the topic:
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3129221
I'll sum this up.
Going into business today is like sitting down to a poker table where only a few players are left, and they have huge stacks of chips. That basically gives them a mathematical certainty of winning, assuming they're decent players. They can afford to lose more than a few hands to flush out the new comers chips, and in short order, put them under.
And that's why we have a shortage of employers. Because, in addition to that rigged game of poker, imagine if we let thos few left at the table change the rules to suit them.
In the first story, they talk about the non-compete clause at Jimmy Johns, but that just goes to show the laziness of the writer, because that clause was dropped nearly two years ago.
And here's the bottom line -- if you're approached to sign a non-compete in order to take a job, look it over carefully and see if it will impact future employment. If you're not comfortable -- walk away from the job. Most employers, unless it's a high-level job, will never pursue you in court if you take a competitive job upon quitting them. And, most of the time, you'd win in court anyway, unless they can prove you financially damaged them.
In the first story, they talk about the non-compete clause at Jimmy Johns, but that just goes to show the laziness of the writer, because that clause was dropped nearly two years ago.
And here's the bottom line -- if you're approached to sign a non-compete in order to take a job, look it over carefully and see if it will impact future employment. If you're not comfortable -- walk away from the job. Most employers, unless it's a high-level job, will never pursue you in court if you take a competitive job upon quitting them. And, most of the time, you'd win in court anyway, unless they can prove you financially damaged them.
Simple solution: Increase the demand for labor.
I have signed a few non competes & I have also worked on the same products at the next employment scenario aka a big No No; no one ever took me to court
NCs are pretty common (from my experience) working within the semiconductor & medical device industries
A point the article acknowledges, if memory serves. You seem to have missed the point. This is an example well-known to the public (since it made national news) the writer is using to foster understanding of the problem.
Again missing the point of the article. For many people, the choice is either sign the non-compete clause, or face homelessness and starvation.
For the vast majority of people turning down a fast-food job and looking for another won't result in homelessness or starvation.
However, as others pointed out, most workers ignore the policy when they start a new job anyway, so the effect is negligible.
I'll sum this up.
Going into business today is like sitting down to a poker table where only a few players are left, and they have huge stacks of chips. That basically gives them a mathematical certainty of winning, assuming they're decent players. They can afford to lose more than a few hands to flush out the new comers chips, and in short order, put them under.
And that's why we have a shortage of employers. Because, in addition to that rigged game of poker, imagine if we let thos few left at the table change the rules to suit them.
Hard to compete with people who can afford accountants, attorneys and lobbyists to overcome barriers to entry in a market while setting up more behind you.
I'm curious what your data is for this assertion--that is, that for the vast majority (which I'd expect to be something like 75% or more majority), turning down a fast-food job won't result in homelessness and starvation.
If memory serves, the reason the Jimmy John's case first made news was because they were enforcing it. The problem is not as bad in fast food as it is in, say, tech fields, where non-compete clauses are fairly common and they do depress wages.
Jimmy John?s Will Stop Making Employees Sign Non-Compete Agreements | FortuneThe non-compete agreement prohibited workers during their employment and for two years after from working at any other business that sells “submarine, hero-type, deli-style, pita, and/or wrapped or rolled sandwiches” within two miles of any Jimmy John’s shop in the United States.
Just so we don't get too far off topic: non-compete clauses are merely one tool employers use to wield monopsony. In most cases, it's only necessary to rely on the fact that labor does not and cannot travel the way products can these days, and to pay attention to the BLS statistics for a given market. When I was an employer, my regular practice was to offer just below the prevailing wages in my market. I could do that, because I knew that the few other employers who were also hiring were doing the same, and we could always depend on getting someone good in a position for less and less over time. While I was VP of Operations, we saw sales double while labor costs, and wages per capita, decreased about 7%.
Our investors were quite happy, of course, but I came to recognize that such practices violate the reason that market economics is supposed to value wages correctly. Employers simply do not compete for labor the way they do for market share for their products.
Setting up more behind you? More what?
Ummmm...sure. Incisive commentary. Worthy of a freakin' Nobel Prize in economics.
The articles point to practices by employers that limit the demand. Your response is roughly equivalent to this: someone notices a chemical factory is burning. Their comment is to say "simple solution. Put out the fire." Or this: Germany is raising and taking over Europe while Japan is taking the Pacific. Simple solution: defeat them. The question in each case is how.
I'll sum this up.
Going into business today is like sitting down to a poker table where only a few players are left, and they have huge stacks of chips. That basically gives them a mathematical certainty of winning, assuming they're decent players. They can afford to lose more than a few hands to flush out the new comers chips, and in short order, put them under.
And that's why we have a shortage of employers. Because, in addition to that rigged game of poker, imagine if we let thos few left at the table change the rules to suit them.
Simple solution: Increase the demand for labor.
I'll sum this up.
Going into business today is like sitting down to a poker table where only a few players are left, and they have huge stacks of chips. That basically gives them a mathematical certainty of winning, assuming they're decent players. They can afford to lose more than a few hands to flush out the new comers chips, and in short order, put them under.
And that's why we have a shortage of employers. Because, in addition to that rigged game of poker, imagine if we let thos few left at the table change the rules to suit them.
Trade barriers, regulations, things that make small business harder but a big business can afford.
That explains the lack of competing employers fairly well but does not really address the labor wage rate (salary?) offered by them. A smaller employer (business) is less apt to get volume discounts on goods/services needed and simply cannot afford to pay labor much over market rate (that required to attract and retain qualified labor) while still remaining price competitive.
Even in times of (nearly) full employment, wages for lower skilled or unskilled (entry level?) labor don't rise as much as those of higher skilled workers because of the "safety net" (public subsidies offered to many of those with low wages) and virtually unlimited immigration (legal and illegal).
My exp has always been the opposite....the mom and pops pay better than the corporations do.
I have no data, just as you didn't when you made the claim that not taking the job could mean starvation and homelessness. Don't move the goalposts now.
I don't think it was ever enforced, but complaints launched an Attorney General investigation that deemed it unenforceable, and the company dropped the clause from it's contracts.
We offer some of the highest wages in the local construction industry and a good benefits package...The market supports us because there will always be clients that want quality work and are willing to pay for it.
Some industries will not support high wages -- period. Fast food is one of them.
You don't say what industry you're in but if you're not happy -- get out.
Artificially boosting wages is an economic disaster for many industries, look at what happened to Hostess.
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