Or you can easily make the argument that if wealth were more equitably distributed, we WOULDN'T need more than 15 hours. Especially when CEOs make more in 15 hours than I make in 4 YEARS. And more than smoe of their employees would make in 8 years.
One could easily make the argument. One would be wrong.
Well, can't argue with that. By which I mean, I literally can't argue with that, because there's not enough "that" to argue with.
You're an economist, and your response is "No, because I said so"? Pretty weaksauce, bro.
Take net personal income of 9 trillion dollars. Divide it by three because apparently soaking the rich will pay for us working one third as much. We now have 3 trillion dollars net personal income. Divide that by 320 million Americans. That's less then 10,000 dollars per capita. Multiply that by average household size of 2.58 perople and you are left with household income of about 25,000 dollars. So assuming we flawlessly redirect all efforts towards perfect equality and there are no diseconomies of scale to this 15 hour work week our perfectly egalitarian society still has to get by on half as many resources per household. However a great number of costs are not very elastic. Having more free time wont really reduce the amount of healthcare you need. So healthcare is now a massively bigger chunk of household spending, and it wasn't a small chunk to begin with...
That's an exquisitely crafted strawman. I particularly like the hat. And the nose.
I'm not calling for Communist-style flat pay (not that it was ever flat in Communist systems). But when CEO's salaries are thousands of times higher than their average employees (as opposed to the modest ratios in most of the rest of the world), then
the system is fucking broken. Especially when the economies where those compensation rates are more modest also seem to be able to manage more egalitarian societies with things like subsidized healthcare and education.
I get it, you're a capitalist and you see me as a dirty, unwashed Marxist. That's why you have your Hillary body pillow and I'm all in for Bernie.
But all this is because I've seen capitalism up close, I've seen its gross excesses and I've seen the way it's destroying American businesses with its obsession with quarterly earnings and short-term profit, the way it's destroying Americans by shipping their jobs to "low-cost regions" and the way it's destroying American politics by making money equivalent to speech, with the result that a handful of rich ideologues are very loudly heard in the halls of power while the rest of us whisper in the dark.