|
|
|
|
|
by msandford
4710 days ago
|
|
Because the "metal must be moved" number is way too low. Imagine that your boss set metrics for you that you could knock out in 30 minutes, but the boss is paying you to be there for a full 8 hours. And imagine that if you worked harder than that, your reward was actually less pay. Also imagine no room for advancement. Someone from outside your company might say that situation is effed up. But to you working for just those 30 minutes and nothing more would be completely logical. That's the situation facing these metal warehouses. Being efficient and shipping metal faster than absolutely required gets them no short term benefits and does them short term harm: reduced rents. The problem isn't necessarily the "metal must be moved" rule it's the quantity in the "metal must be moved" rule. So some people say "fix the rule" and others say "abolish the rule" because of substantially different world views. Some people like maintaining and fixing code; others like organizing differently to reduce the amount of code necessary. |
|
I can see that the regulation might be ineffective because of that.
But I don't see how anyone could claim such a regulation makes it more profitable to make late shipments.