I personally would prefer some sort of self-initiated variant of the German concept called "Mitbestimmung" (co-determination).
My variant would include the following:
1) Elimination of all unions within the company.
2) Instead, an elected "team" of 2-5 employee representatives (non-executives, elected by non-executives) would sit as members of the company's board of directors with voting/veto rights on such topics as manufacturing relocation, executive pay/pay raises, employee pay/pay raises, bonuses, vacation time, benefits, etc.
3) Executive pay would be based on some sort of chosen multiplier of average, non-executive pay. For example, if non-executives made between $30K-$130K per year with the average being $75K, then the tiers of executive pay, CEO, VP, CFO, etc., would be based upon 4.0, 3.0, 2.5, etc. multipliers established by the Board of Directors. Meaning, the employee reps on the board would have a say in this multiplier. In the example above, the CEO would make $300K; the VP $225K; the CFO around $190K, etc. Ideally, the multipliers would be more or less fixed once established. If an executive wants to raise his/her pay, then the average non-executive pay would have to increase, not the multiplier.
4) Again, the above would not be government-mandated but instead instated on a company-by-company basis by executives and non-executives alike.
5) Bonuses for executives and non-executives would be awarded on a year-by-year basis and would correlate directly with earnings gains versus the previous year. The system for awarding such bonuses would also be based on a similar average x multiplier system as described above.
6) Finally, each and every employee would receive six weeks of vacation per year. The company would close shop completely for two weeks in July or August and two weeks in December. The remaining two weeks of vacation would be taken at the discretion of each employee. Aside from these six weeks, there would be no official cap in terms of the "40 hour work week." If your boss needs you to work 80 hours per week for several weeks to get a project through, then that is what is expected of you. No overtime pay would be awarded.
7) Elimination of the minimum wage.
Edit: Added #7 above.
"1) Elimination of all unions within the company."
I was under the impression that Germany had a lot of union members, it's just that the unions and management don't fight with each other all that much, compared to other countries.
"2) Instead, an elected "team" of 2-5 employee representatives (non-executives, elected by non-executives) would sit as members of the company's board of directors with voting/veto rights on such topics as manufacturing relocation, executive pay/pay raises, employee pay/pay raises, bonuses, vacation time, benefits, etc."
This would never work without some sort of government interference. Interlocking directorates are to entrenched in our system.
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3) Executive pay would be based on some sort of chosen multiplier of average, non-executive pay. For example, if non-executives made between $30K-$130K per year with the average being $75K, then the tiers of executive pay, CEO, VP, CFO, etc., would be based upon 4.0, 3.0, 2.5, etc. multipliers established by the Board of Directors. Meaning, the employee reps on the board would have a say in this multiplier. In the example above, the CEO would make $300K; the VP $225K; the CFO around $190K, etc. Ideally, the multipliers would be more or less fixed once established. If an executive wants to raise his/her pay, then the average non-executive pay would have to increase, not the multiplier."
Again, this will never happen without government interference. At the very least a required non-binding vote by the stockholders, but even that probably isn't even enough.
"4) Again, the above would not be government-mandated but instead instated on a company-by-company basis by executives and non-executives alike.""
Yes, i'm sure CEO's and the interlocking directorates that serve them are just jumping at the gun to slash their pay.
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5) Bonuses for executives and non-executives would be awarded on a year-by-year basis and would correlate directly with earnings gains versus the previous year. The system for awarding such bonuses would also be based on a similar average x multiplier system as described above."
Not good enough, executive compensation should be tied to longer term growth. Part of their compensation should be held back as a reserve for 'clawback' if they underperform. There's too much of an incentive to do short term risky shit for short term windfalls that put the future of the firm at risk.
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6) Finally, each and every employee would receive six weeks of vacation per year. The company would close shop completely for two weeks in July or August and two weeks in December. The remaining two weeks of vacation would be taken at the discretion of each employee. Aside from these six weeks, there would be no official cap in terms of the "40 hour work week." If your boss needs you to work 80 hours per week for several weeks to get a project through, then that is what is expected of you. No overtime pay would be awarded."
LOL
"7) Elimination of the minimum wage."
Not that minimum wage would really make a difference since it's too far below market equilibrium anyway.