growstuff
PippaZ
GrannyRose15
By far the most disturbing inequality at the moment concerns unemployment. Nearly 50% think people have lost their jobs because of under achievement. Only 31% think job loss is attributable to bad luck. Apparently, by 57% to 39% Conservative voters are more likely to accept poor performance as the reason for job losses.
But doesn't it stand to reason that struggling businesses are going to sack their least successful employees in a crisis. It might not be that they were bad at their jobs but simply relatively poorer workers
Consevative voters would look at the whole contribution of workers to the success in a company and act accordingly, Labour voters might have a different criteria for success. In other words the answers might simply reflecte their experience, rather than it being seen as moral issue.
No, it doesn't stand to reason GrannyRose15. Businesses will reorganise and shed cost. Neither of these means you are less successful at what you have been doing.
Exactly! A business will look at functions within the organisation and evaluate how much each section contributes to the overall success of the business. It might, for example, decide that computers could do the jobs of a whole section of human employees. In the current climate, a restaurant is likely to come to the conclusion that waiters and waitresses don't contribute to the business when it's not allowed to trade. Retailers might decide to shut their high street outlets and change to an online model, with inevitable job losses.
That is simply a misreading of the situation. If you have risen in your job and, up to the business having problems, are well paid why would that make you think those people are "relatively poorer workers". They are just expensive a company running into possible trouble financially has to cut costs and pray they can rehire people of the same calibre when the market improves or they have paid off their debt.
Your description of a restaurant in no way shows those people as being "poorer workers". Poor work is not the change in the business, it is simply a societal change and one we need to protect workers from while they move into other, newly created jobs. As a country, we also need to support the creation of those jobs.
I have really never heard such a nasty, point of view, degrading people at a most difficult time of their lives. If you can't do your job you get sacked or redeployed, not made redundant. This is typical Conservative speak and grinds down those who lose their jobs in a downturn. I would go as far as to say I would see someone as wicked who tells those losing their jobs at this time that it's because they are "poorer workers", grinding down on those already struggling to stay afloat.