yes, it is the boss mentality, but then I'm incentivised to make hard decisions. And in this day and age, with Lean and other approaches to management (and bear in mind, the Irish state even runs Lean courses for the SME sector via your local LEO), do you not think that any competent manager will know this, spot it and take action? Maybe in some areas the person will "get away with it" for a while, but not in an effective and efficient organisation. And if they don't, in time when the incompetent manager gets replaced they'll get a shock.And there you have the boss mentality.
The guy who completes his tasks in 20 hours is gonna get on just fine.
He'll spend the other 15 hours reading, or watching cat memes on the Internet, or chatting up the secretary in accounts.
He's not gonna tell his boss he's finished everything by Wednesday lunchtime.
Because, well, because of what you said
I would never, in a million years, consider any company making engineering parts as low skilled. The firms I'm referring to are the likes of Braun (who just assembled parts), Fruit of the Loom and such like who often make low price commodity goods and who have fled out of Ireland in the last 30 years. Even then, they can upskill staff to the required standard in an Asian country easily enough.It is an area I know very well I worked in costings before I retired from high-end manufacture high margins and wait for it large scale low margin manufacturing of commodity engineering parts, to OEM all over the World including China,
You would not last long manufacturing low margin high volume or low volume low margin items with a mindset that includes the word low skilled in Ireland,
I have seen competitors move to low-cost countries and we wiped them out in a few years all down to their managements mentality of low margins equal low skill,
Funny enough I was expecting a reply along these lines,I would never, in a million years, consider any company making engineering parts as low skilled. The firms I'm referring to are the likes of Braun (who just assembled parts), Fruit of the Loom and such like who often make low price commodity goods and who have fled out of Ireland in the last 30 years. Even then, they can upskill staff to the required standard in an Asian country easily enough.
Of course , that is a typical boss analysis. But it is not what happened.yes, it is the boss mentality, but then I'm incentivised to make hard decisions. And in this day and age, with Lean and other approaches to management (and bear in mind, the Irish state even runs Lean courses for the SME sector via your local LEO), do you not think that any competent manager will know this, spot it and take action? Maybe in some areas the person will "get away with it" for a while, but not in an effective and efficient organisation. And if they don't, in time when the incompetent manager gets replaced they'll get a shock.
And if they aren't spotted, and when, in due course, their employer goes bust because staff were only 55% productive and their competitors undercut them, these guys will be the first ones moaning outside the factory gates as to how "terrible and unfair" it all is.
We are a small open economy who need to be as efficient as possible so we can be survive. The more lean we are the more secure your job is. There are plenty of overseas companies who are only too happy to out price us.Of course , that is a typical boss analysis. But it is not what happened.
What happened is the employee, by his own diligence and initiative has worked out how to do the tasks in 18 hours.
He was employed by HR, some data analysts, a recruitment agency, advertisers and a host of middle management flunkeys. All, probably, paid much more than him and, all, undoubtedly, highly coached in Lean management techniques.
They determined that the requisute tasks required 35 hours to complete. The employee is not lazy or unproductive, quite the opposite. But he also knows that revealing his efficiency and focused work, will not help him. It will mean more work, for the same pay. Maybe a marginal increase.
Meanwhile the profit his labour creates will go in to the pockets of the shareholders, or the directors.
That's my point. Surplus wealth is all around us, but it is being hoarded by a smaller and smaller group of people.
We can afford a small state pension for everyone at 65. We've just got to prise it out of the hands of wealthy parasites.
Of course , that is a typical boss analysis. But it is not what happened.
What happened is the employee, by his own diligence and initiative has worked out how to do the tasks in 18 hours.
He was employed by HR, some data analysts, a recruitment agency, advertisers and a host of middle management flunkeys. All, probably, paid much more than him and, all, undoubtedly, highly coached in Lean management techniques.
They determined that the requisute tasks required 35 hours to complete. The employee is not lazy or unproductive, quite the opposite. But he also knows that revealing his efficiency and focused work, will not help him. It will mean more work, for the same pay. Maybe a marginal increase.
Meanwhile the profit his labour creates will go in to the pockets of the shareholders, or the directors.
That's my point. Surplus wealth is all around us, but it is being hoarded by a smaller and smaller group of people.
We can afford a small state pension for everyone at 65. We've just got to prise it out of the hands of wealthy parasites.
I'm all in favour of rewarding hard work. Which is why, at the end of 45 years of daily grind, people should be allowed a few years of relaxation. 65 is old. Pretty soon chronic illnesses will be upon us, then our ship will be waiting for us. The one dragging behind it , a great birdless silence.Do you really want to spend your entire career in a dead end job doing nothing, not progressing, not taking advantage of a situation to earn more money and gain more wealth.?
As for the profit you create goes into the pockets of shareholders, if it's a quoted company then perhaps you should consider buying shares and joining the club. Or maybe start up your own company and take all the risks associated with that and just sit back and take in the profits earned by the workers. Sounds easy after all.
I fully agree that income equality has widened and the rich have got richer and that there may be opportunities for an increased tax take as a result, if it is done right. But I would also argue that most people in Ireland are wealthier and better off then they were 40 years ago. I'm a returned emigrant, I was one of the generation that left because we had to, not because we wanted to spend 2 years in Australia dossing around. I worked hard and like all of my Irish friends who left at the same time, I was able to come back in the Celtic Tiger era, an opportunity that pervious generations didn't have.
So what's my point? My point is that if you sit on your backside all day at work, doing nothing, you will achieve nothing in life. If you make an effort and get off your rear end then you will be better off instead of feeling bitter about those who are.
you may not realize the problem with the Government raising the pension age is directly connected with your statement above,I really dont get this obsession with getting the full 40 years PRSI stamps.
Is it really worth another 10 years slaving away, just to get 50 EUR more per week on the state pension?
Most people should have private pension arrangements, or maybe I am mixing in an elitist group.
Average life expectancy in Ireland is 81.5 years, so it is not that short a period. Some will shuffle off earlier but many are living far far longer and whilst Covid will cause a blip in those numbers I fully expect they will continue to go north as the years pass. My Dad worked hard for 50 years, physical work and retired at 65 and lived another 22 years.I'm all in favour of rewarding hard work. Which is why, at the end of 45 years of daily grind, people should be allowed a few years of relaxation. 65 is old. Pretty soon chronic illnesses will be upon us, then our ship will be waiting for us. The one dragging behind it , a great birdless silence.
We'd all love to be successful businessmen, telling everyone what to do, dossing around the golf course, every Friday afternoon, but let's get real.
Most people work for a living, often a paycheck to paycheck existence.
Pay the rent, pay the bills, bring up the kids, have a pint or two, watch a match, a couple of weeks in Torremelinos.
Is it really beyond our means to allow low paid workers a short, modest, dignified pension.
Should it be changed to how many years you have worked before you reach retirement age, like your dad,Average life expectancy in Ireland is 81.5 years, so it is not that short a period. Some will shuffle off earlier but many are living far far longer and whilst Covid will cause a blip in those numbers I fully expect they will continue to go north as the years pass. My Dad worked hard for 50 years, physical work and retired at 65 and lived another 22 years.
So the question is, if you want to retire at 65, are you prepared to pay for it. ? It comes at a cost, either increased taxes or increased payments into your own private pension. Someone, somewhere, has to cough up the hard cold cash for that pension.
I am very well aware of the issue, The Irish PRSI system from an employee and self-employed has lots of loopholes that the government are aware of but never addressed,While no system is perfect, basing it on years has other issues around part time work. I have a year or two early on where I have full prsi stamps but paid almost no prsi as the hours were low. It feels wrong to count those the same as later years where the prsi payments are multiple times higher.
The issue I have is we went after increasing age and never reformed the system,While no system is perfect, basing it on years has other issues around part time work. I have a year or two early on where I have full prsi stamps but paid almost no prsi as the hours were low. It feels wrong to count those the same as later years where the prsi payments are multiple times higher.
have you got a link I am traveling and out walking all day so will not be near the internet until late tonight,Interesting piece on pensions and age related finance on Newstalk just now at 9.45am.
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