Big corporations aren't necessarily evil (although their actions and 
effects on the social and physical environment typically are) but they 
are DEFINITELY toxic work environments...

Your cogent description of the capitalist "system" is probably correct 
from the point of view of economics but that's why economics is called 
"the dismal science"; it's neither science nor calculated to improve the 
human condition.



Kenneth Kixmoeller/fh wrote:

>On Dec 15, 2006, at 6:13 PM, MB Software Solutions wrote:
>
>  
>
>>But Chet's point *is* valid---there are more SMBs than big dog
>>enterprises.  SMBs make up most of the economy, iirc.
>>    
>>
>
>Sorry for the OT drift, but comments like these are so common that a  
>bit of reality is to the common good. I have been an economic  
>development prefeshonall, so this stuff isn't just off the top of my  
>head:
>
>Yes, major corporations don't employ many folks in the greater scheme  
>of things. Also, when one is talking about their own employment, they  
>do not create many *new* jobs, either. Politicians love to blabber  
>that small business is what is important, as they generate 80% of new  
>jobs. True enough, but not the whole story.
>
>Major corporations, research universities and manufacturing companies  
>(in the broadest definition, including extraction-based industries)  
>are economic engines. Tourism comes next, and behaves like an  
>extraction-based industry. They drive the economy of a community. A  
>vast proportion of the "virtuous" small businesses serve to feed the  
>beasts as contract manufacturers and service companies. Of these, a  
>large corporate headquarters has by far the greatest short-term  
>economic impact. Research universities, long-term. Retailers,  
>consumer services and non-profits feed off all of them and are on the  
>bottom of the food chain for creating jobs, but they are the most  
>vulnerable and therefore a good economic indicator.
>
>Also, most of the next generation of major corporations spin off from  
>the older "majors," so a healthy large business community is the best  
>single indicator of a community's future economic health.
>
>So a large corporate HQ doesn't create many of it's own jobs, but it  
>has a vastly disproportionate impact on a community's and therefore a  
>country's economy.
>
>(I'll save Chet the trouble: "Big corporations are evil." Happy?)
>
>
>Ken
>
>
[excessive quoting removed by server]

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