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by maaku
4397 days ago
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That is one philosophical position -- a classist and strongly capitalist one dividing members of a company into owners and employees. This leads to division of society into workers (who sell their labour) and capitalists (who collect rent). An alternative, more progressive position is that all workers should be entitled to some ownership of the fruits of their labour. That is to say, everyone involved in an enterprise, no matter how big or small, is entitled to receive ownership proportional to the impact of their contribution to the success of the endeavor. In this world view there is no division between owners and employees, and unearned rents are minimized. This is really a philosophical / moral / political debate. |
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There are some seductive ideas in communism, but making ownership a function of direct contribution sure as hell isn't one of them. The fact that the setup is biased towards owners is the very reason why so many people go and try to start their own business.
Starting your own business and making it successful is extremely hard and risky work. The entire point of putting that hard work in is that at the end of the day, you own the system, and can retire on the fruits of the system you gave birth to.
If ownership decreased to be a proportion of direct contribution, apart from the fact that it'd be very hard to measure that, it would also demotivate most entrepreneurs, myself included, from lifting a finger to start a new business.