You're grasping.PartyOf5 wrote:Productivity is not the measure of revenue generated. My getting something done 100x faster <> employer gaining 100x the revenue. Making burgers at twice the pace does not equal twice the numbers of burgers sold.GrumpyCatFace wrote:Yes, it absolutely does mean that. Productivity is the measure of Revenue generated per employee. Your employer is gaining 100x the amount of revenue from your work, yet you are being paid the same. If there's no connection between that, then why bother learning new skills? This is why we have 'skill inflation' - you have to be MUCH more learned to fulfill the same function, for the same pay, as what your father did. Not only that, but you're taking on DEBT to get that learning.PartyOf5 wrote:I think that it is an issue without an easy solution. It's complicated.
The tech revolution completely changed the relationship between pay and productivity. Just because I can now do things on a computer in 1/100th the time it used to take my using paper and pencil doesn't mean I should now get paid 100x as much.
I learn new skills to ensure that I am a valuable asset to an employer. Being a valuable asset to an employer will usually get you an increase in salary. If not, and you feel you are worth more, then use those skills to get a new job that will pay you more. Being more learned than our fathers is another non-equivalency. A lot of our fathers held down jobs that don't exist anymore, so there is no "same function". Not to mention there is no way you're not making more than they did for the same function.
No, there's not a 1:1 relationship between speed of execution and revenue, that's why we have the Productivity metric. Revenue/Employee.
Every time I make a report, or even have a short email conversation, I'm doing the work of several-to-many people a generation ago. The resources required to run a modern database on paper would be absolutely staggering. Most modern corporations could not even exist without Egyptian-pharaoh levels of labor.
Yet we make very nearly the same wages per hour worked - why do you think they pay by the hour? Wouldn't piece-work make more sense?
Because even a mid-level office drone is operating at the equivalent of hundreds of his kind just a short time ago. Where do you suppose all the money went that paid that staff?
As far as the learning vs. last gen, I wasn't referring to actual education. i meant the amount of raw knowledge and skill needed to operate as a modern employee vs. then. No matter what you do for a living, you are tracking at least 10x the number of things happening that your father had to, and communicating at light-speed with your coworkers, no matter where they're located. That's not making more for the employer?