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Comment by mschuster91

18 hours ago

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I think the losses you’re thinking of are more than made up by the gains coming from the employees being afraid they can be fired at any moment.

  • It’s really disappointing to read someone describing that kind of toxic working environment as a “gain”.

  • - Make employees scared to point out flaws.

    - Make employees less engaged in the success of the company.

    - Encurrage employees to hide or mask issues.

    - Encurrage employees to pretend to be more productive than they are.

    - Make employees mentally and physically less healthy.

    - Make employees shy away from taking on more responsibility or tasks.

    - Make employees less happy to train up new hires in their work.

    Yes. Gains. All those gains. I can only see gains here.

> One might wonder where the US could be if the corporate culture wasn't so trigger happy on firing people and if laws against improper terminations would a) exist and b) be enforced.

Probably the labor market would look more like countries that already do that?

> The amount of knowledge cost alone that any company incurs with such bullshit is insane, but almost no one gives a fuck because the lost knowledge reacquisition cost is usually booked under "training costs" or whatnot.

No. Bean counters don't magically skip counting those beans. Hiring managers aren't magically ignorant of effects on their team's productivity.

We would probably have much higher unemployment and slower-moving industries, and might no longer be the economic powerhouse of the world.

When it's simple and easy to fire people, companies are a lot more willing to take a chance on hiring somebody they aren't 100% sure will be a good employee, and willing to hire a lot and grow fast knowing in both cases they can fire easily if needed.

I find it sad that so many people never think about the second and third-order consequences of what sounds like feel-good policies. They often end up being a net-negative for the people they were intended to help.

  • I strongly disagree. If they're is such a massive difference we would see alot less globally competetive European companies.

    > a lot more willing to take a chance on hiring somebody they aren't 100% sure will be a good employee.

    Just proof hire them for 6 months to a year.

    Your argument doesn't hold for someone that has worked for 10 years. If they were a bad hire; it's on you at that point.

    But the improvements are plenty;

    - Easier planning life and reduce work anxiety for employees.

    - It encurrage companies to invest and train their existing employees since they're hard to get rid off.

    - It makes employees less scared to speak up or discuss problems.

    - It makes companies more cautious about reckless hiring if they're not sure about their economics.

    - Allows older workers to remain productive for longer, reducing the burden on the pension or unemployment system from people 55+ having a hard time finding new work for few years before retirement.

    Finally, i must ask what the societal purpose of jobs and companies are. From a pure "numbers go up", there is a cost to worker protection. But id argue the society as a whole benefit much more from it than having a multinational IT company on the stock market. There is a balance to these things ofourse, but dismissing it outright is not fair.

    • You're welcome to disagree, I don't mind some competition.

      > Just proof hire them for 6 months to a year.

      As is common with most quickly tossed out "tiny fixes" to Socialist policies of excessive regulation, this makes the whole thing more complex and doesn't really solve the full problem for either workers or companies the way true free markets do. The only real "just" is just stop meddling with what everyone else does, let workers quit and companies fire whenever they want to.

      > Your argument doesn't hold for someone that has worked for 10 years. If they were a bad hire; it's on you at that point.

      Yes it does. It's not necessarily only that they're a bad hire. They could have the wrong skills or temperament or something for where the company needs to go, or the company could need to shut down a whole department or something. I don't know, the world has infinite complexity and possibility. I'm not smart enough to come up with everything anyone could ever want to do, and frankly, neither are you or anyone else.

      > Easier planning life and reduce work anxiety for employees.

      That sounds like a personal problem. I don't care to reshape national policy to cater to someone's alleged anxiety.

      > It encourage companies to invest and train their existing employees since they're hard to get rid off.

      Eh maybe, but many companies still do that now because good people are still hard to find. That's the better and more reliable way to do all of these things.

      > It makes employees less scared to speak up or discuss problems.

      Plenty already do that, I don't think it's much of a point. It's not really proven any more than the counter-statement that it makes employees more willing to slack off.

      > It makes companies more cautious about reckless hiring if they're not sure about their economics.

      That's exactly my point. I think it's good to let them "recklessly" hire if they think they can afford it. Some will get things right and grow huge, other will fail and those workers will be able to find new jobs more easily.

      > Allows older workers to remain productive for longer, reducing the burden on the pension or unemployment system from people 55+ having a hard time finding new work for few years before retirement.

      "Allow" how? They can already do that fine. Many companies value the experience of older workers just fine without the Government forcing them to do things. And I'd rather they have a comfortable retirement already set up from a robust investment market, possibly with a 401k or something like that. I don't want them to be dependent on either one company or the Government.

      And intentionally saving this for last along with the end:

      > If they're is such a massive difference we would see alot less globally competetive European companies.

      > Finally, i must ask what the societal purpose of jobs and companies are. From a pure "numbers go up", there is a cost to worker protection. But id argue the society as a whole benefit much more from it than having a multinational IT company on the stock market. There is a balance to these things ofourse, but dismissing it outright is not fair.

      "much less competitive European companies" is exactly what I do see, and you are also arguing that that's a good thing. Europe seems to have very little in the way of invention or growth pretty much since WWII. They haven't invented much new, and most of what they have invented has been eclipsed by more aggressive and nimble American companies. The European economy is still mostly dominated by the same large companies mostly doing the same things they've always done, sometimes adopting new technology long after American companies led the way.

      I'm not dismissing anything outright. I've carefully observed the results of both styles of economy and I prefer freer markets. I like helping lead the way towards creating awesome things thanks to everyone's free will. It's not always perfect, but the market usually fixes things faster and better than half-baked Government policies.

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  • It's a valid point. As with anything there is balance. Consider the value of being able to plan some aspect of one's life. This generally goes up as one gets older and is responsible for others.