Laptop Jockey
Intern
- Joined
- Jul 18, 2021
- Posts
- 76
Ultimately it's the shareholders who make the call. Turns out, people want a better return on their investment than subsidising travellers.
The real question is, would doing what you've outlined give them a better ROI.
The whole system of publically traded companies is fundamentally broken and entirely driven by speculation on short term (quarterly and annual) growth figures. It isn't even about annual or even quarterly profit figures any more, it is just speculative short term trading. The best evidence of this perversion is how often company's announce profits and share prices go down because they weren't as high as investors speculated they would be. Exec boards are primarily incentivised to demonstrate short term stock price growth, typically as a major part of their remuneration. Combine that with the lack of organic hiring and personnel growth, we've created a system of people parachuting in, pumping up short term speculative stock prices and leaving.
The stock price is simply a graph of stock brokers happiness, and we've enslaved the entire economy to this in ways never seen in four hundred years of stock trading.