← Back to context Comment by doesnt_know 9 hours ago I don't believe the 10x claims, but since when has salary been any indication of productivity? 4 comments doesnt_know Reply OtherShrezzing 7 hours ago Productivity is a value measured in dollars. So if you’re 10x more productive, someone somewhere is making 10x the $ value from your output.You should expect this to be reflected in the labour market somewhere. Maybe not your own salary, but in somebody’s salary. dgellow 3 hours ago In economics productivity is generally the outputs divided by the inputs used for production. Are you talking specifically about capital productivity? tehjoker 2 hours ago One of the most important graphs in economics shows a divergence between increases in labor productivity and worker take home share since at least the 1970smaybe you are thinking ceos or shareholders
OtherShrezzing 7 hours ago Productivity is a value measured in dollars. So if you’re 10x more productive, someone somewhere is making 10x the $ value from your output.You should expect this to be reflected in the labour market somewhere. Maybe not your own salary, but in somebody’s salary. dgellow 3 hours ago In economics productivity is generally the outputs divided by the inputs used for production. Are you talking specifically about capital productivity? tehjoker 2 hours ago One of the most important graphs in economics shows a divergence between increases in labor productivity and worker take home share since at least the 1970smaybe you are thinking ceos or shareholders
dgellow 3 hours ago In economics productivity is generally the outputs divided by the inputs used for production. Are you talking specifically about capital productivity?
tehjoker 2 hours ago One of the most important graphs in economics shows a divergence between increases in labor productivity and worker take home share since at least the 1970smaybe you are thinking ceos or shareholders
Productivity is a value measured in dollars. So if you’re 10x more productive, someone somewhere is making 10x the $ value from your output.
You should expect this to be reflected in the labour market somewhere. Maybe not your own salary, but in somebody’s salary.
In economics productivity is generally the outputs divided by the inputs used for production. Are you talking specifically about capital productivity?
One of the most important graphs in economics shows a divergence between increases in labor productivity and worker take home share since at least the 1970s
maybe you are thinking ceos or shareholders