|
COG
|
OrgLabor Discussion |
|||||||||
| |
[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] LTV
Vic,
I read with interest your recent submissions on LTV. Upon thinking
about
the subject, I considered the issue along theoretical and practical
implications for labor lines. Allow me to state both considerations.
Theoretical
Along theoretical lines, the question at hand seems, to me, to be: To
whom
is the company beholden?
Economically speaking, the failure of a business is a constantly, lurking
possibility. Exit from the economy is just as natural as entry. Firms
enter, sell their product/s, there is a life cycle for a product--and
possibly the company--firms exit.
The impact of exit from the economy can be measured in multiple ways.
In
an overall business producer/consumer sense, there are other
firms--supposedly--who provide a needed good. There are other companies
from which consumers can purchase the good. In other words, the business
worlds always has another company ready to meet the needs of the
consumers. I would label this perspective the business/economic model.
Another lens through which one can view the demise of a company is via
the
impact to the people who labored at the company. There seems to be a
missing viewpoint on this perspective. In a business sense, these workers
go and labor for other firms. All is well and dandy. However, closer
review, I think, would show that people who labored at a particular firm
made an investment. The investment is in time, money, and commitment. The
workers are often specialized people who can only labor on a particular
component within the firm. There is a loss of pension. These issues are
not easily re-dressed when one moves from one firm to another.
Given that there does seem to be an investment by both laborers and
capitalist, the question I posed earlier seems to be answered as follows:
the firm is beholden to the capitalist who bought shares in the
firm. Given that workers' interests are not being considered in any model,
at least none of the current, dominant models I presented, it seems
reasonable to assume that workers are not considered when firms fail.
Because workers are not considered when firms fail, then one should ask
a
preceding question to failure: Are workers considered in business decisions
about how the firm should structure itself? This question is a little more
difficult. I do not have a ready answer. I assume that workers, given the
dominant models of which I am familiar, are considered as inputs. One
needs land, labor, capital, and entrepreneurship for a firm to succeed. In
the absence of those four components, then failure occurs and the business
never gets off the ground. If labor is considered as an input, then labor
interests will never be considered beyond ensuring that there is a
sufficient supply of labor for firms.
Practical implications for labor
The preceding theoretical discussion concluded that labor interests are
never considered during business decisions beyond ensuring that there is a
sufficient supply of labor for firms. That conclusion, in my opinion, has
a variety of implications for labor to consider when making decisions about
how firms should be structured. The dominant, theoretical models take
labor as inputs. Perhaps, labor should strive to be labeled and considered
differently.
If labor, in my opinion, is to secure a place in the business model
other
than an input, then it should strive to be a capitalist. Given that the
theoretical models of the day are simply not going to disappear at the wave
of a hand, then the only viable method seems to be to work within the
existing model to secure one's ends. In other words, capitalism is here to
stay--DEAL WITH IT.
Dealing with it, for me, means that labor should strive to be a member
of
the share-holding class. By becoming a member of the class to which firms
are beholden, then labor can utilize that position from which to influence
firm operations.
There are several assumptions that I make when I state that labor can
utilize its position as a share holder in firms to influence the operations
of the firm. Allow me to state my tenets.
1. Labor wants firms to exist. Because labor, by its very word, needs
a
firm in which to "labor," then labor needs firms to exist. In the absence
of firms, then labor ceases to exist.
2. Labor wants firms to succeed. Failing firms defeat labor's intent.
3. Labor wants firms to be profitable. Only profitable firms are able
to
pay workers. If firms are not viable, then they exit the economy. If
firms are marginally viable, then labor must exist at the margins. If
firms are viable and are profitable, then firms are able to pay labor
acceptable wages.
There are probably other tenets upon which I am resting, but I think
that
these three capture the essence.
The question that must be answered now is: At which point should labor
strive to achieve its position as a share-holder in firms? The answer is
not that far fetched: When the firm is most vulnerable. A failing firm
needs support. If the failing firm requests assistance from labor--I
believe that these are often called concessions--then the assistance should
come with caveats; one of which should be ownership.
There is an additional caveat that must be stated. Ownership in a firm
would include two components. One. The first component would simply be
ownership. For example, a firm issues 100 shares. Labor holds 50% of the
firm. Labor, therefore, holds fifty shares of the firm. This is pretty
straight forward. The second component, and the essence of the additional
caveat, is that the shares must maintain influencing rights. The shares
should not simply be shares held in the name of labor with some trustee
having full-voting rights by which to "represent" labor. If labor is to
have influence on the affairs of the firm, then the very means must
exist. Those means, in my opinion, come through holding ownership with
influence.
LTV
Now that you know the position from which I state my input on LTV, then
I
think that the situation at LTV and labor's involvement should be
clear. If the firm, which happens to be called LTV in this case but could
be any company, wants the assistance of labor, then labor should attach
"strings" to its involvement. Labor should garner shares in the firm, and
those shares should entitle labor to have input and influence into the
affairs of the firm.
Labor is NOT asking for some ridiculous rights. Labor is NOT asking
for
"exorbitant" wages. Labor is not asking for a hand out. Labor is asking
that they be compensated for their investment. That compensation should be
influence.
Thank you for taking the time to read this.
Sincerely,
Joseph Doggett
|