Another related thing - how would you ever prevent someone from bidding more for something they want, and so raise its price? That is, are you advocating fixed arbitrary price setting? That just doesn't work.
I have to agree with the previous poster: the fundamental issue society is facing is that demand is higher than supply. What is annoying is that the reasons for this are many: culture, weather, conflict, policy, disease. There is no magic bullet here.
What is clear, is that you can't directly increase supply by forcing companies to give more of their revenue to employees. This is the same thing as trickle-down; what you're hoping is that if you give employees money, some of them will start their own companies to increase supply over what would be otherwise. You could also try to tell people to get by with less - but then that will destroy jobs, because hey you're not buying the thing I need! So there's more systematic change needed - make it so people don't need perpetual income to have a house (which will totally upend the entrenched status quo based on property taxes; trying to reform that would be quite difficult, because you'd want to avoid loopholes that make the situation worse. Maybe AI can come up with a scheme, eh?)
So if you want to "fix" the system, you need policies that make it easier to create competition for all the companies that are exercising enshittification. Get rid of systematic issues which put too many middlemen between producers and consumers. Incentivize activities that actually produce goods and transformative services - not sales, entertainment, and advertising. Make it easier to enter various professions (basic health care does not need the kind of expense it has today; sure specialists and surgeons need a lot, but all the other stuff?)
If you want to take it out on CEOs, don't string them up - make them build houses. I mean sure you can do stuff like put the marginal tax rate at say 90% on any income over $1M, but that won't actually be anything other than a token gesture that has no material effect on anything.
This is why some US policies (actual or proposed) make no sense; deporting millions of workers is not going to fix inflation; sure it will reduce some tax burden, but the best that can do is reduce the deficit slightly. It will reduce demand somewhat, sure, but it's very likely it will reduce supply faster than it will reduce demand (in aggregate; in some areas it will reduce demand for some things enough that supply is again in balance), exacerbating the situation. Giving people $25k to make a home purchase is directionally not helpful. However, some policies are helpful - $50k tax credit to start a new business for example, or tax incentives to build lower-cost housing.
That's the thing with these recent union issues: they do nothing to address supply shortages in the places that really have supply shortages, often because they physically can't - such as things like the concrete sand, or food shortages, or any other raw material issue. Physics is a pain like that.