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by candybar 1189 days ago
Sure but that collusion actually makes sense from their perspective and is literally the exact opposite of what's being alleged, which is that Big Tech is essentially keeping the cost of talent artificially high in order to hurt their competition.
1 comments

> Sure but that collusion actually makes sense from their perspective and is literally the exact opposite of what's being alleged

But it absolutely calls in question the notion these companies wouldn't do something just because they're "competing" against each other.

> But it absolutely calls in question the notion these companies wouldn't do something just because they're "competing" against each other.

This doesn't make any sense and you're misunderstanding the original comment. The point is the idea that they are hurting their bottom line by overhiring, but the whole thing works out because it prevents their competition from hiring is completely nonsensical, when you're alleging that they are all doing it. If they are all hurting themselves by overhiring, they can't be deriving any benefit from keeping the talent away from your competition. Your competition is also overhiring and doesn't need the talent either. So keeping them away from your competition helps your competition at your expense.

> The point is the idea that they are hurting their bottom line by overhiring, but the whole thing works out because it prevents their competition from hiring is completely nonsensical, when you're alleging that they are all doing it. If they are all hurting themselves by overhiring, they can't be deriving any benefit from keeping the talent away from your competition.

Is there a reason why you think FAANG only competes against each other and no one else? FAANG colluding to prevent other companies from getting access to tech talent is exactly something they would do even tho they are "competing" against each other. OpenAI for example is now seen a direct competitor against Alphabet and its cash cow.

Once again, this doesn't even make the slightest bit of economic sense and you're once again failing to understand extremely very basic points. No one is saying saying FAANG only competes against each other. It's just that you're completely unable to articulate any actual theory as to what's going on and why anyone would do it. Like which companies are talent-starved vs which companies are part of the cabal? How does the cabal even know which other companies are talent-starved and which other companies are trying to do the same thing they are? How do they even coordinate this? Even assuming your theory (which is simply mathematically impossible) is plausible, do you think all these big company CEOs meet and decide on quotas, so that everyone has to hire X amount? Everyone benefits from hiring less, right? What is the enforcement mechanism here?

Also, it's simply not economically possible for the cabal to be so threatened by the talent-starved companies as to engage in completely self-sabotaging actions to increase their own cost, while these apparently exceptional talent-starved companies are unable to outbid companies that derive no actual value from the talent.

Anyone who's familiar with any type of organization (and even have cursory knowledge of economics) should be able to see that overhiring has mostly to do with the fact that managing a larger team confers status to the manager while the cost is borne by the organization, so there are systemic incentives for managers at all levels to increase and compete for scope, which is inherently inefficient with respect to the goals of the organization at large. Ignoring these dynamics and focusing on implausibly airtight collusion between large entities that are made up of 10s or even 100s of thousands of people that constantly leak everything is just pure naivete.