Value$

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Lifestyle

I am following up on Erik's blog of yesterday which brought into question the amount paid to Judge Judy -- the highest paid TV personality -- and Vik's comment that it was “Free market”. (OK, Vik said “Free market, baby!”).
Leaving TV personalities aside, in the world where I spend a great deal of my time -- the highly-regulated world of healthcare -- there are relatively new regulations which seek to impose limits on compensation paid to certain executives. Whether these regulations will withstand legal challenge remains unclear. In any event, as Vik might say, “It ain't a free market, baby!”
This brings into focus the broader question of what people are paid for what they do. Many, many factors come into play and the questions persist. Our society seems to make some interesting choices about the “value” of what people do. But “value” is a very subjective term, or, maybe, “value” has nothing to do with it.

Comments

Corey Bearak

Progressive taxation and corp taxes could address many of the outlandish compensation packages. No problem rewarding competence but some salaries at corp. levels fail to reflect merit.

Submitted by NULL (not verified) on Wed, 08/06/2014 - 23:21

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It's still a free market because we have a choice. You can choose another career if yours is too regulated. I'm all for it, there's nothing spiritual about being poor. Or rich, for that matter. The level of consciousness will have to rise if you want a different system. We certainly aren't victims.

Submitted by StephenMichel on Thu, 08/07/2014 - 00:27

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Stephen Michel

You are talking about Cuomo's Executive Order 38, where he limited the amount of money an executive can make. This would appear to interfere with a person right to earn all they can. An executive can earn more, but a lot of paper work needs to be done to file for an exemption. I personally think this was a political ploy. He could have accomplished the same thing by saying we will only reimburse executive salaries, up to a maximum of $X.

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