Good points Lawry.     I feel the same way about these cultural institutions
who decide that their CEOs must have salaries commensurate with the private
sector.    

 

In my profession no classical performing arts institution makes more than
sixty per cent of their costs.     The labor size and one of a kind design
makes an economie of scale an impossibility.   Even a Broadway show that
sells out continually will take over one hundred performances of the same
work to turn a modest profit.     Success and a return on the investment
takes several thousand performances.      Keith spoke of his music business
being in the black but then he didn't take a salary.    I haven't had a
salary in my company since the debacle in Washington in 2004.     

 

My business that turns the profit is teaching and even that is losing steam
with the economy.    But that profit paid for the ten concerts and the
conference in Washington and is still paying the bloated corpse of the banks
that committed usury on us with the rewriting of the rules in Congress in
the late nineties.   

 

Generally, it takes a very adept CEO of an Arts organization to simply
survive.     None of the regular private sector CEOs that I've known,  would
ever have the cleverness and entrepreneurial skills to run an Arts company.
Even Keynes lied about it when he was a bust.    He had small casts (and
costs) and didn't take a salary himself but he kept his Russian ballerina
wife happy so he called it a success.   

 

What is not being considered here is whether the current methods and systems
of both public and private sectors are really up to the job of running a
society.  

 

 Instead we hear the same old theories that were stale when they were born
in the 18th and 19th centuries.      It takes a very Aristotelian reading of
history (that Greek couch story) to justify where we are.      We get myths
about predators and history lessons from a time in history where the data is
so small as to represent basically the art of story telling.     These are
then built into grand social and economic theories that then run head on
into the world of lightening communication and instant information that
relies upon correct whole system information for the thing to work at all. 

Mike's article about my board member Thomas Stewart's book on "Intellectual
Capital" is a case study in the failure of the system to deal with the
implications of the emerging technologies.     I'm very proud that both Mike
and Tom  as well as yourself have been and are members of our Board of
Advisors.  

 

But where is the vaunted European scientific attitude behind these
theoretical stories?    Where does it work holistically for the good of an
entire society?    The idea of "losers" (required by the current economic
fad)  is a toxic idea that guarantees long term failure.    It's always a
simple matter of time before the nature of things wipes out these mayflies
and they are consigned to the cobwebs of history.     When something like
the failure of the firefighters of the current Russia happens, where is the
examination of the systems that failed?    This is not Chernobyl.     They
don't have to cover them over with cement because of thousand year
toxicities.    This is a failure of everyday living.    A failure that is
systemic. 

 

Peter Senge said that we should all be thinking systems theory.     I've
always done that.   I was taught it from birth by my parents and in the
aural information systems of music.     I was also taught that forms have a
life and then they change.     That change was a good thing and that life
was cyclic.  

 

What I see here in your wonderful analysis is the incompetence of the
average business person to think in holistic systems and the greater and
more tragic incompetence of civil servants to think about the future and
design structures that help both public and private sectors meet the needs
of the citizens of the country.   It is much too complicated to be left in
the hands of people who simply think consumption or picking up their salary
paycheck and protecting their butts.  

 

Thanks again for your analysis and caring to give the time to do it.    

 

I also  thank Mike, Arthur, and the rest of the members of the list  who
stir my thoughts by writing more than a couple of sentences even when I
disagree.     I thought of you the other day when I met Sandwichman for a
drink and conversation.     It's so much easier when we meet and know each
other face to face.     I still remember that Pizza at Tyson's Corner.
That was a good conversation.      My father used to say that sharing your
thoughts and intelligence and stories of your life was a kind of honoring of
both the subject and the people taking part.     Negative or Positive was
not the issue.   As long as it wasn't personal and was a part of the
examination of the problem from every angle, it was a good thing.  IMHO. 

 

REH

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Lawrence de
Bivort
Sent: Wednesday, August 11, 2010 10:52 AM
To: RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION
Subject: Re: [Futurework] FW: Why I'm Not Hiring - Wall Street Journal;
August 9, 2010

 

Good morning, everyone,

 

Several things strike me about this article. I will assume the numbers
stated are accurate.

 

1. This businessman seems not to realize that ALL economic activity (indeed,
ANY activity per se)  carries with it overhead costs. In businesses, because
they have explicit accounting, the overhead costs become visible. The
family, as a unit, also has overhead costs -- like entertainment; telephone,
electrical, water, sewage and a multitude of other bills; food; education
for kids; vacations; transportation; etc. etc., but typically, families fail
to keep accounts accurately enough to be able to know what their overhead
costs are.  Indeed, besides businesses, very few of us have calculated the
overhead costs of our activity units.  So the whinings of this businessman
have a certain compelling quality -- but only because we read them and are
persuaded that this 'burden' is exceptional -- it is not. We all face
overhead burdens from multiple sources.  

 

2. Sensitive as he is to one source of overhead burden, state and federal
government, he ignores other overhead costs that he incurs and over which he
DOES have direct control: rent for his facility; transportation costs; cost
of secretaries, receptionists, etc. He does not mention how much his company
covers his personal perquisites, like his vacation time, his company car,
his 'business entertainment', and who knows, his country club membership. 

 

3. He fails entirely to discuss his personal "take" from the company: his
salary, benefits, profit distribution, etc.  Another way to look at this is
that "Sally" is not receiving what her value is to the company, because part
of that value is being siphoned off to pay her bosses' benefits: salary,
benefits, profit distribution, perquisites, etc.  (Of course, thanks to what
we could call a Law of Overhead, NO employee will ever be paid "what they
are worth", because part of their value-added will always go to help cover
overhead.)

 

4. So his analysis lacks several key components that are necessary before
his plea for sympathy can be credited. Yes, these are tough times. Good
businessmen will look at the entirety of their operations to assess how to
weather them, and it must be understood that the CEO and executive committee
benefits should not be allowed to remain intact when the rest of the company
is squeezed.  But too many executives have the attitude that they have
"worked hard and DESERVE their benefit", and they cry crocodile tears for
the rest of the people in the enterprise who must shoulder not only their
own share of the squeeze but their untouchable, above-the-fray bosses.

 

Whenever I receive a junk phone call from some charity, the first thing I do
is ask how much the CEO earns a year. Not once has the caller ever been able
to answer that question, nor has an organization ever volunteered to find
out.

 

Michael Fleischer should have started this article with that vital
information.  Then he would have earned his right to whine....

 

Cheers,

Lawry

 

 

On Aug 11, 2010, at 10:21 AM, Arthur Cordell wrote:





One reason why companies are slow to hire more full time employees.

 

>From Steve Kurtz.

 

 

 

From: Steve Kurtz [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Wednesday, August 11, 2010 5:54 AM
To: Arthur Cordell
Subject: Why I'm Not Hiring - Wall Street Journal; August 9, 2010

 










Why I'm Not Hiring - Wall Street Journal; August 9, 2010 
  
By Michael P. Fleischer 
  
With unemployment just under 10% and companies sitting on their cash, you
would think that sooner or later job growth would take off. I think it's
going to be later-much later. Here's why. 
  
Meet Sally (not her real name; details changed to preserve privacy). Sally
is a terrific employee, and she happens to be the median person in terms of
base pay among the 83 people at my little company in New Jersey, where we
provide audio systems for use in educational, commercial and industrial
settings. She's been with us for over 15 years. She's a high school graduate
with some specialized training. She makes $59,000 a year-on paper. In
reality, she makes only $44,000 a year because $15,000 is taken from her
thanks to various deductions and taxes, all of which form the steep, sad
slope between gross and net pay. 
  
Before that money hits her bank, it is reduced by the $2,376 she pays as her
share of the medical and dental insurance that my company provides. And then
the government takes its due. She pays $126 for state unemployment
insurance, $149 for disability insurance and $856 for Medicare. That's the
small stuff. New Jersey takes $1,893 in income taxes. The federal government
gets $3,661 for Social Security and another $6,250 for income tax
withholding. The roughly $13,000 taken from her by various government
entities means that some 22% of her gross pay goes to Washington or Trenton.
She's lucky she doesn't live in New York City, where the toll would be even
higher. 
  
Employing Sally costs plenty too. My company has to write checks for $74,000
so Sally can receive her nominal $59,000 in base pay. Health insurance is a
big, added cost: While Sally pays nearly $2,400 for coverage, my company
pays the rest-$9,561 for employee/spouse medical and dental. We also provide
company-paid life and other insurance premiums amounting to $153.
Altogether, company-paid benefits add $9,714 to the cost of employing Sally.

  
Then the federal and state governments want a little something extra. They
take $56 for federal unemployment coverage, $149 for disability insurance,
$300 for workers' comp and $505 for state unemployment insurance. Finally,
the feds make me pay $856 for Sally's Medicare and $3,661 for her Social
Security. 
  
When you add it all up, it costs $74,000 to put $44,000 in Sally's pocket
and to give her $12,000 in benefits. Bottom line: Governments impose a 33%
surtax on Sally's job each year. 
  
Because my company has been conscripted by the government and forced to
serve as a tax collector, we have lost control of a big chunk of our cost
structure. Tax increases, whether cloaked as changes in unemployment or
disability insurance, Medicare increases or in any other form can
dramatically alter our financial situation. With government spending and
deficits growing as fast as they have been, you know that more tax increases
are coming-for my company, and even for Sally too. 
  
Companies have also been pressed into serving as providers of health
insurance. In a saner world, health insurance would be something that
individuals buy for themselves and their families, just as they do with auto
insurance. Now, adding to the insanity, there is ObamaCare. 
  
Every year, we negotiate a renewal to our health coverage. This year, our
provider demanded a 28% increase in premiums-for a lesser plan. This is in
part a tax increase that the federal government has co-opted insurance
providers to collect. We had never faced an increase anywhere near this
large; in each of the last two years, the increase was under 10%. 
  
To offset tax increases and steepening rises in health-insurance premiums,
my company needs sustainably higher profits and sales-something unlikely in
this "summer of recovery." We can't pass the additional costs onto our
customers, because the market is too tight and we'd lose sales. Only
governments can raise prices repeatedly and pretend there will be no
consequences. 
  
And even if the economic outlook were more encouraging, increasing revenues
is always uncertain and expensive. As much as I might want to hire new
salespeople, engineers and marketing staff in an effort to grow, I would be
increasing my company's vulnerability to government decisions to raise
taxes, to policies that make health insurance more expensive, and to the
difficulties of this economic environment. 
  
A life in business is filled with uncertainties, but I can be quite sure
that every time I hire someone my obligations to the government go up. From
where I sit, the government's message is unmistakable: Creating a new job
carries a punishing price. 


Todd Fry
ProBenefits USA, LLC
800.585.5802 toll-free
816.741.9307 desk
816.741.9418 fax
[email protected]
www.probenefitsusa.com <http://www.probenefitsusa.com/> 

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