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Anyone take a look at Google's Schmidt's middle class wage increase challenge?

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  • Anyone take a look at Google's Schmidt's middle class wage increase challenge?

    Goal is to raise 100,000 middle class workers' salaries by $10k each by end of 2021. They just extended the date to December. Here are the details.

    Looking through it, though, I realized the goal covers total compensation. If healthcare costs rise by about 8% per year on an average cost family plan, you're halfway there. Get about a 3% inflation rate too on a $50k salary, and you just might be able meet the goal without increasing real wages at all. Cynic in me wants to copy/paste standard union contract with 3% annual wages and submit it as my "unicorn idea."

    But it is another interesting way to look at why wages never go up in America. It can easily cost a billion more to employ 100,000 people at median wage with constant health benefits by the end of 2021 than it does today, and all that without employees seeing any real benefit from it whatsoever. Maybe half of that will be eaten by inflation. The rest will be sucked into the voracious maw of the healthcare sector. A broken arm will cost double what it does today in 10 years, and costs double today what it did 10 years ago. And it's the same x-ray and 5 minute application of a roll of shitty fiberglass that it has been for 40 years.

    In so many ways, the central problem of the American economy is healthcare. We've got to get off this merry-go-round and make the madness end. We're so addicted to the market, or even illusions of the market, that we're willing to sacrifice all our upward mobility and discretionary income to it. It's madness.
    Last edited by dcarrigg; November 17, 2018, 02:19 PM.

  • #2
    Re: Anyone take a look at Google's Schmidt's middle class wage increase challenge?

    Originally posted by dcarrigg View Post
    Goal is to raise 100,000 middle class workers' salaries by $10k each by end of 2021. They just extended the date to December. Here are the details.

    Looking through it, though, I realized the goal covers total compensation. If healthcare costs rise by about 8% per year on an average cost family plan, you're halfway there. Get about a 3% inflation rate too on a $50k salary, and you just might be able meet the goal without increasing real wages at all. Cynic in me wants to copy/paste standard union contract with 3% annual wages and submit it as my "unicorn idea."

    But it is another interesting way to look at why wages never go up in America. It can easily cost a billion more to employ 100,000 people at median wage with constant health benefits by the end of 2021 than it does today, and all that without employees seeing any real benefit from it whatsoever. Maybe half of that will be eaten by inflation. The rest will be sucked into the voracious maw of the healthcare sector. A broken arm will cost double what it does today in 10 years, and costs double today what it did 10 years ago. And it's the same x-ray and 5 minute application of a roll of shitty fiberglass that it has been for 40 years.

    In so many ways, the central problem of the American economy is healthcare. We've got to get off this merry-go-round and make the madness end. We're so addicted to the market, or even illusions of the market, that we're willing to sacrifice all our upward mobility and discretionary income to it. It's madness.
    I don't disagree with your point regarding healthcare DC but your thesis may be too narrow and you're blaming the messenger. Healthcare cost in the US can be ridiculous but it's not the only basic modern requirement that is out of control. Borrowing for education in the US has created a huge burden for the middle class and these are full recourse loans. For most people, you pay them off or die to resolve them. Transportation is an almost equal burden but as everyone here should know, you don't borrow money to buy a car. The largest burden for most families is rent/mortgage. Consumer mortgage debt is 5-6X student loans, auto loans or credit cards. But these are all symptoms.

    If incomes in the US had continued to move up commensurate with productivity increases we wouldn't be having this conversation. Teachers et. al., would be making $100,000 a year. But we don't value people who do valuable work for the great majority of the population, we only value and pay for innovation. I don't see any change in this direction.

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    • #3
      Re: Anyone take a look at Google's Schmidt's middle class wage increase challenge?

      Originally posted by santafe2 View Post
      I don't disagree with your point regarding healthcare DC but your thesis may be too narrow and you're blaming the messenger. Healthcare cost in the US can be ridiculous but it's not the only basic modern requirement that is out of control. Borrowing for education in the US has created a huge burden for the middle class and these are full recourse loans. For most people, you pay them off or die to resolve them. Transportation is an almost equal burden but as everyone here should know, you don't borrow money to buy a car. The largest burden for most families is rent/mortgage. Consumer mortgage debt is 5-6X student loans, auto loans or credit cards. But these are all symptoms.

      If incomes in the US had continued to move up commensurate with productivity increases we wouldn't be having this conversation. Teachers et. al., would be making $100,000 a year. But we don't value people who do valuable work for the great majority of the population, we only value and pay for innovation. I don't see any change in this direction.
      Circle Medical, among others, seem to be moving in a positive direction towards refining the primary medical health care business model.

      Applying AI/ML in partnership with mobile primary care physicians is something worth experimenting with and exploring:
      https://www.circlemedical.com/

      Disclosure, I’ve bought in hook, line, and sinker.....but more importantly, so have some serious heavyweight Angels.

      But I don’t see it solving the problem of non-primary, non-preventative, and pharmacology based healthcare.

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      • #4
        Re: Anyone take a look at Google's Schmidt's middle class wage increase challenge?

        Originally posted by santafe2 View Post
        I don't disagree with your point regarding healthcare DC but your thesis may be too narrow and you're blaming the messenger. Healthcare cost in the US can be ridiculous but it's not the only basic modern requirement that is out of control. Borrowing for education in the US has created a huge burden for the middle class and these are full recourse loans. For most people, you pay them off or die to resolve them. Transportation is an almost equal burden but as everyone here should know, you don't borrow money to buy a car. The largest burden for most families is rent/mortgage. Consumer mortgage debt is 5-6X student loans, auto loans or credit cards. But these are all symptoms.

        If incomes in the US had continued to move up commensurate with productivity increases we wouldn't be having this conversation. Teachers et. al., would be making $100,000 a year. But we don't value people who do valuable work for the great majority of the population, we only value and pay for innovation. I don't see any change in this direction.
        If you think innovation is valued or well paid, you should talk to more scientists making $70k per year to toil in obscurity to make some MBA or College President rich. Money's about perceptions of power, not merit. If it was about merit, inheritance would be illegal. This is also why kids who clerk for supreme court justices for $70k per year get hired by firms a year after earning more than the President makes, and lobbyists make more then Congressmen. Actually doing the work or wielding the power isn't worth as much as the illusion of influence.

        You're absolutely right about the productivity piece. So maybe healthcare's a second-order problem behind that. Still, it's the leading cause of middle-class bankruptcy and the easiest way to get wiped out, on top of an income-share hog that keeps growing vs other compensation. Other countries do not make going to the hospital a high-stakes game of financial russian roulette. Of all the problems in the US, and there are myriad, this one seems among the easiest to fix. Hell, if the Truman admin had the Roosevelt admin's skill at whipping votes in the Senate, or if Roosevelt had lived just three more months, we probably wouldn't be having this conversation right now.

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        • #5
          One thing which is a bit more than a bit disingenuous about Eric Schmidt suggesting he'd like to increase middle class wages is over half the people working for Google are doing so as temps or through outside contractors.

          It is one thing for a tiny company or a person just starting out to do whatever is needed to get by and sort of build their way up, and it is quite another for a market monopoly to reshape many adjacent markets while doing the double irish dutch sandwich in bermuda (everyone but the monopoly can pay for government services), promote mass immigration (lowers wages), then have mostly temp outsourced workers (once again minimize paying into the system) & suggest they have some path forward for raising all boats.

          The Texas AG lawsuit of Google mentions how Google did a bid rigging illegal partnership with Facebook to destroy header bidding & preserve Google's monopoly profit margins on their ad serving tech. They were literally responsible for defunding journalism and moving money across to themselves. And on top of that they created a proprietary publishing format (AMP) that they ranked preferentially in their search results, dumping additional tech overhead cost onto publishers to ensure they could kill header bidding & keep control over the ad money.

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          • #6
            Originally posted by dcarrigg View Post
            Re: Anyone take a look at Google's Schmidt's middle class wage increase challenge?


            So maybe healthcare's a second-order problem behind that. Still, it's the leading cause of middle-class bankruptcy and the easiest way to get wiped out, on top of an income-share hog that keeps growing vs other compensation. Other countries do not make going to the hospital a high-stakes game of financial russian roulette. Of all the problems in the US, and there are myriad, this one seems among the easiest to fix. Hell, if the Truman admin had the Roosevelt admin's skill at whipping votes in the Senate, or if Roosevelt had lived just three more months, we probably wouldn't be having this conversation right now.
            if the democrats had adopted RICHARD NIXON'S health plan we'd be a lot better off. they thought they could do better with the expected coming democratic administration. but by the time carter came in republicans had organized around the lewis powell letter's suggestions, and healthcare legislation was dead.

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            • #7
              My understanding of health care costs; even here in the UK, it pays to fly to the likes of Thailand, and book into one of their first rate hospitals; surely better than contemplating bankruptcy?

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