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by caoilte
1364 days ago
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> Who takes more risks, a person who works 37.5 hours in an office or a founder who puts their own capital in to try and create a company? Inherited capital in every startup I've worked at. And enough of it that they got several runs at success. It wasn't risky at all. > Which brings more value to a community, a person who is employed, or a person who employs people? Too vague a generalisation to have any value. What matters is who does the work and the social value of that work. |
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> Inherited capital in every startup I've worked at. And enough of it that they got several runs at success. It wasn't risky at all.
In the event this was an attempt to answer, I have to say, feels like a non-answer. You do say "worked at" though, which makes me think not as a founder but as an employee, thus the capital risk wasn't yours so much.
> Too vague a generalisation to have any value. What matters is who does the work and the social value of that work.
It is vague, sure, a doctor probably has more value than someone who employs a cleaner to clean their home. So I suppose, a better question would be:
6. Which brings more value to a community, a person who works in an office doing menial admin work for 5 years, or a person who spends 5 years founding a new company that provides medical services to the community, employs 100 people, and produces tax receipts (direct and indirect) of 1000x the person who works in an office doing menial admin work?
If you're thinking "how can I possibly answer that question?" then you're right. You can't. The obvious answer is that the founder ultimately produces more value, and that's okay. You don't have to hate or dislike people for creating value — creating jobs and providing services is crucial to the economies around the world.
There seems to be a knee-jerk reaction to such a question of "well the office worker has value too", yes, nobody is saying people are value-less, but there is an objective reality that some people produce more value than others.
Ultimately, my purposefully crafted questions lead up to one thing: some people deserve to be paid more than others.