I think they meant companies dont pay 100% of insurance.Companies don’t offer insurance to their employees now? Most people I know have their insurance through their employer, is this for the new employees?
I think they meant companies dont pay 100% of insurance.Companies don’t offer insurance to their employees now? Most people I know have their insurance through their employer, is this for the new employees?
There's a huge trend in placing entry and lower level employees through temp agencies, see also Corteva, etc. locally. No, the mother company does not offer or pay them any benefits.Try construction out. Large corporations do but there's often lay offs.
It's the constant growth model. No one can be happy unless they're top 100. Needs to be a sustainable model put forward.The company I work for makes parts for the automotive industry and certain customers orders have been down but others seem really high. It seems like it may be slowing down in general. Some of the employees seem to see some similarities to the auto industry part of 2008.
Okay, fertilizer prices went down, chem prices were steady, seed was up a percent or two. Rent was up 5-10%. Commodity prices have dropped 30-40%. The commodity drop makes way more difference than the percent or two change in costs.Go to the cost side, not the return side. You know better. This year the squeeze is from both ends.
This. All of this.There's a huge trend in placing entry and lower level employees through temp agencies, see also Corteva, etc. locally. No, the mother company does not offer or pay them any benefits.
Yep. Contractors are basically just leasing hours to people and pocketing as the middle man. All the guys at this current place I work are 1099 independent contractors. All the ******** and no benefits. That's been the change the last 15 years.This. All of this.
I work as a vendor for several HUGE companies in California. No "Employee" of those countries I work with is an actual employee of the company they work for. All of them are "Contractors" Even though the contracting agency exclusively services that company.
The reason? benefits.
Okay, fertilizer prices went down, chem prices were steady, seed was up a percent or two. Rent was up 5-10%. Commodity prices have dropped 30-40%. The commodity drop makes way more difference than the percent or two change in costs.
Biggest increase for production was interest rates but many producers had enough cash to avoid lines of credit so that was basically irrelevant.
So yes, commodity prices tanking is what hammered the crop side. The hog market is also in shambles due to the board of trade. Feed costs have dropped dramatically but that hasn’t offset the price drop.
Unless you are talking milk side (which I have no clue about) the cost side hasn’t affected much.
Why does everyone always want to punish the savers? To answer your question **** no.A question for general curiosity, would you be willing to have your 401k return cut 3% annually if 3% went to increased wages for the employees of the company your 401k was invested in? Don’t give me that won’t ever happen response, all you need to answer with is a yes or no.
That is true. You hope for small increases and good yields and average grain prices. Least amount of stress that way.Had an old guy tell me a few years ago that even though the farmer will always complain about increases in inputs, it's never good when they go down. That particular year seed went down (only time in my 15 years) and he was right. Some folks were in rough shape. Fertilizer may be an exception because it can be moved by other things but often it's not.
Why should it come from the employees? There's plenty of margin at the top to give back from. It's already plain as day wages haven't increased with inflation for 30+ years.A question for general curiosity, would you be willing to have your 401k return cut 3% annually if 3% went to increased wages for the employees of the company your 401k was invested in? Don’t give me that won’t ever happen response, all you need to answer with is a yes or no.
A question for general curiosity, would you be willing to have your 401k return cut 3% annually if 3% went to increased wages for the employees of the company your 401k was invested in? Don’t give me that won’t ever happen response, all you need to answer with is a yes or no.
I ask because we get so excited about the high returns lately but hate “how the sausage is made”. Unfortunately it’s now about maximizing returns for stock prices. A lot of stock is in 401ks. There is correlation there.Why does everyone always want to punish the savers? To answer your question **** no.
Why does everyone always want to punish the savers? To answer your question **** no.
Credit cards are the worst thing ever invented. Well, outside of social media.Because we have an entire economy built on debt.