| Question to you: why shareholders are giving out RSUs in the first place? Are they doing it out of kindness of their heart? If you look at the whole picture, you will see that “to align employees with company goals” is simply “to incentivize employees to make shareholders richer”. Shareholders usually own 90+% of the stock, while employees ownership is in single percentages at best. That includes early employees. The deal for Capital is very simple: give away few percents of stock and make Labor grind tirelessly to increase value of Capital by orders of magnitude. Percentage wise everybody wins, both Labor and Capital (so called not zero sum game), in absolute terms however the distribution tells a different story. Another counter-example:
Imagine startup fails or is acquired at decreased valuation: will be it zero sum or not? Well, employees options are wiped out first, VC capital gets first claims to money pool, Founders have second claims after VCs (or would have made liquid in separate deals), while regular employees are the ones who screwed. |
> Imagine startup fails or is acquired at decreased valuation: will be it zero sum or not?
It's not zero sum, the total sum changed over time as the company lost value. Non zero sum doesn't mean "value only goes up"
> Percentage wise everybody wins, both Labor and Capital (so called not zero sum game), in absolute terms however the distribution tells a different story.
Thank you for conceding my point. It is a non zero sum game. There's an argument to be made about that employees are not given their fair share of RSUs or options, but that is a wholly separate argument/debate and you weaken your point by trying to say it's a zero sum game.