Baron Von PWN wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:The analogy with the parasite is incorrect.
Typically, the exchange between a host and a parasite is zero-sum. The parasite takes, while the host receives nothing beneficial (for the most part).
With investments, money for labor, etc., it's a positive-sum exchange, i.e. it's mutually beneficial ex-ante. Ex-ante means "from the beginning," or as it's perceived at the time the exchange was made (later on, the expected value comes into contact with the actual value, and the difference may result in high satisfaction, indifference, or frustration).
The analogy doesn't hold up because the exchanges aren't the same.
The relationship is mutually beneficial for the corporation (estate) and the shareholder(aristocracy). Not necessarily for the people working (serfs) in the corporation.
What benefit does the worker receive from investment in their parent company? If wall mart does well the masses that make it work see very little of that benefit, they continue to make very little. The majority of its profits go to the shareholders and board of directors.
The very people making the profits possible receive the smallest share.
Then they are endo-symbiotic, not parasitic.
Some benefits the worker recieves from investment in their company? Well, investment to say, open up another branch will open all kinds of new positions and opportunities. It will need a few new bosses, even more managers, a few new jobs possibly transporting between the two branches. And the worker from the company, if they have earned it, should be first in line to get a promotion. Grab the next rung on the ladder buddy!
Where I think you are stuck is that wages do not depend on how profitable a company is, it depends on the value of the work being done and the competitive wages for similar jobs around the area. Walmart is a crappy example, because most of their profits have little to do with how the workers do their jobs, and a lot more to do with buying 90%(?) of their product from China. For example, a janitor mops the floor everynight, is content with his wage and benefits, does a good job and has job security so long as they continue to do a good job and don't call in to work all the time or show up drunk. If Walmart's profits double the next year, why should the janitor get more for doing the exact same job? Sure they can try to get a raise or added benefits, but they dont deserve it just because some other guy took a risk and built another walmart or because the purchasing manager got a major customer discount from a respectable supplier.
If the worker at Walmart does more work or works smarter or helps the company by going above and beyond their duties, then yes the worker will deserve more money IMhO. Success requires effort and recognition.