This thread has a VERY high potential of being told "take it to Fratching", so I figured I'd be proactive.
Good move by the Swiss. I've heard of quite a few studies which have found that the "flatter" the income pyramid, the greater a country's overall prosperity (studies had looked at both geographically distributed "snapshots", and single countries over an extended period). It's no accident that people see the span between WW2 and Vietnam as a "golden age" in the U.S. - an average worker could support a family and have enough left over for a few luxuries. What we're seeing now is "a rising tide lifts all yachts" - jobs being moved offshore, 2-income couples struggling to get by, while CEOs are raking in obscene amounts of cash.
I can see a couple issues the Swiss need to fix:
1) Put the brakes on companies leaving because of this (CEO wanting more money but not wanting to raise entry-level wages). Of course, since the major industries in Switzerland have value added BECAUSE they're located in Switzerland (does "Austrian chocolate" or "Italian watch" conjure images of quality?), that's probably less of an issue than for other countries. Also, Swiss banks are world-renowned for privacy BECAUSE they are subject to Swiss law - move out and they're out of that environment.
2) What about multinational companies, franchises, and conglomerates? Does this apply only to employees based in Switzerland, or does their entire operation have to meet the ratio? Does an individual McDonalds' have to meet the ratio at the restaurant, with the ratio being taken separately at corporate, or is the CEO capped at 12 times what a burger flipper makes? If it were applied to North America, would staff at CP Hotels and CP Rail (or Bridgeport machine tools and Cessna aircraft - both divisions of Textron) be treated as being part of the same company, or different companies, for purposes of the ratio? Does this mean the waterboy for a footbal team has to earn at least 1/12 the salary of the star quarterback? Is Tom Cruise's pay for a movie limited by what the actor playing "3rd private on the left" earns?
I'd say the Swiss need to couple this to a tariff on products imported from countries that don't have a similar law.
Good move by the Swiss. I've heard of quite a few studies which have found that the "flatter" the income pyramid, the greater a country's overall prosperity (studies had looked at both geographically distributed "snapshots", and single countries over an extended period). It's no accident that people see the span between WW2 and Vietnam as a "golden age" in the U.S. - an average worker could support a family and have enough left over for a few luxuries. What we're seeing now is "a rising tide lifts all yachts" - jobs being moved offshore, 2-income couples struggling to get by, while CEOs are raking in obscene amounts of cash.
I can see a couple issues the Swiss need to fix:
1) Put the brakes on companies leaving because of this (CEO wanting more money but not wanting to raise entry-level wages). Of course, since the major industries in Switzerland have value added BECAUSE they're located in Switzerland (does "Austrian chocolate" or "Italian watch" conjure images of quality?), that's probably less of an issue than for other countries. Also, Swiss banks are world-renowned for privacy BECAUSE they are subject to Swiss law - move out and they're out of that environment.
2) What about multinational companies, franchises, and conglomerates? Does this apply only to employees based in Switzerland, or does their entire operation have to meet the ratio? Does an individual McDonalds' have to meet the ratio at the restaurant, with the ratio being taken separately at corporate, or is the CEO capped at 12 times what a burger flipper makes? If it were applied to North America, would staff at CP Hotels and CP Rail (or Bridgeport machine tools and Cessna aircraft - both divisions of Textron) be treated as being part of the same company, or different companies, for purposes of the ratio? Does this mean the waterboy for a footbal team has to earn at least 1/12 the salary of the star quarterback? Is Tom Cruise's pay for a movie limited by what the actor playing "3rd private on the left" earns?
I'd say the Swiss need to couple this to a tariff on products imported from countries that don't have a similar law.
Comment