My neighbor's house was hit by a falling tree 6 weeks ago. He still waiting for the contractor to come out and fix it.
Yes, prevailing wage offers are too low, and I think Kling is exactly right- there are a lot of zombie enterprises that simply can't raise wages without having to immediately fold, and that there are a lot more of these …
My neighbor's house was hit by a falling tree 6 weeks ago. He still waiting for the contractor to come out and fix it.
Yes, prevailing wage offers are too low, and I think Kling is exactly right- there are a lot of zombie enterprises that simply can't raise wages without having to immediately fold, and that there are a lot more of these after the COVID idiocy. Additionally, cheap roll-over financing at all levels is disappearing with the inflation pulse and rising base rates- that is also eating into wage the level of wage increases.
I actually would have chose "All of the Above", but all of the answers eventually fold back into wages being too low, or the asking rates have increased significantly, but the pithy answer is usually the logically the more correct one.
My neighbor's house was hit by a falling tree 6 weeks ago. He still waiting for the contractor to come out and fix it.
Yes, prevailing wage offers are too low, and I think Kling is exactly right- there are a lot of zombie enterprises that simply can't raise wages without having to immediately fold, and that there are a lot more of these after the COVID idiocy. Additionally, cheap roll-over financing at all levels is disappearing with the inflation pulse and rising base rates- that is also eating into wage the level of wage increases.
I actually would have chose "All of the Above", but all of the answers eventually fold back into wages being too low, or the asking rates have increased significantly, but the pithy answer is usually the logically the more correct one.