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by seahawks78
1033 days ago
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No I am asking for a situation when the unions have an agenda of extracting maximum benefits out of the company while actively encouraging its members to put in the absolute bare minimum of effort. This will in a few years time will make the company's products prohibitevly expensive due to the associated cost inflation. As a result of which the company's products are no longer competitive in the free market unless heavily subsidized by tax payer dollars (think UAW and its role in gutting American car mannufacturing. These days except for states in rural US, cars made by American car companies: GM, Ford, Chrysler are mostly considered as jokes all over the world). I mean the very simple question is: who pays? What protects the shareholders, management and the employees? |
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But let's take your premise and reword it.
What happens if shareholders have an agenda of extracting maximum benefits out of the company while actively encouraging its demise?
We see that all the time with private equity groups loading up on debt so they can make a huge profit and then letting the company go bust.
What happens if senior managers have an agenda of extracting maximum benefits for minimum effort?
Again, how many CEOs get golden parachutes after wrecking a company?
Who protects the workers in those situations?
You'll find (in some cases) unions do take a long term view. They want to secure long term benefits rather than a short term bump. That's because they're working for people who need a regular pay cheque. So you'll see compromises being made in order to secure longer term employment.