Dumb idea. Wages reflect productivity, or the supply and demand of labour in an economy. Limiting wages would cause and under-supply of labour on that kind of income, which tends to be highly skilled and highly competitive. You'd probably see some kind of brain drain.
Doesn't quite fit. How would you see an under supply of labor? Or, more important. Why?
Quote from: Sandtrap on June 08, 2015, 01:04:17 PMDoesn't quite fit. How would you see an under supply of labor? Or, more important. Why?Because nobody is going to work in higher positions for no extra pay, provided they'd hit the cap. Are you talking about just wage labour, or things like capital income too?
No matter the pay.
>no incentive to advance or innovateobviously you mean personal incentives, but i mean, that's just kind of hilarious
Sure, you get passionate people who will do it anyway
Quote from: Sandtrap on June 08, 2015, 01:14:14 PMNo matter the pay. But there's no incentive to advance or innovate as soon as you hit that ceiling. Sure, you get passionate people who will do it anyway, but most of us need some kind of carrot to get the ball rolling.
i think there's a lot more people like that than you think though
What kind of benifits would you pick? Let's do some thinking.
Quote from: Sandtrap on June 08, 2015, 01:25:33 PMWhat kind of benifits would you pick? Let's do some thinking.Private or state benefits? I wouldn't pick any regardless, I don't think. Those benefits are still a cost which wouldn't otherwise be there if there were no ceiling, and people who've reached the ceiling are surely wealthy enough to cover their expenses without needing any kind of benefit.
How would you do it?
Quote from: Sandtrap on June 08, 2015, 01:41:19 PMHow would you do it?How would I stop costs from going up?
The current system is engineered for the selfish. You can't deny that because you said it yourself.
The system does not support that. Doesn't support the lower end of the spectrum. For example. The farmers, up here. These people work their asses off. And, sure, maybe they don't have the heads to go higher places. So they do the best they can.
but does not fuck the lower end so hard?
Quote from: Sandtrap on June 08, 2015, 01:58:43 PMThe current system is engineered for the selfish. You can't deny that because you said it yourself.There's a big difference between being selfish and then being incentivised to produce things. QuoteThe system does not support that. Doesn't support the lower end of the spectrum. For example. The farmers, up here. These people work their asses off. And, sure, maybe they don't have the heads to go higher places. So they do the best they can.Working your ass off doesn't make you productive; if Canadian agriculture is being unproductive it should be allowed to die off, so labour can re-allocate itself. That said, like most countries, Canada also has farm subsidies which keep the inefficiency of the sector alive. But they're getting rammed up the ass and they can't do anything about it.Quotebut does not fuck the lower end so hard?Guaranteed minimum income for people earning nothing, and wage subsidies for people earning below a certain level. While abolishing the minimum wage.
2. Work is work, Meta. When you have no days off in a week, and you're on your feet every day, you can't call that not productive. Snare in that statement.
The fuck is somebody working off a bare minimum going to do to buy a home or property when they can't even afford it because the guy up top can basically take the cake and eat it too?