When someone dies it costs money to find, hire, and then train a new person. So if the old person doesn’t die/quit you save money. If too many people die/quit you get a reputation and then you need to pay even more as people decide to work at McDonald’s rather than risk their life (or whatever you bad job experience is about.
the article is about these companies not spending enough on safety and training…
More than half said that they’d felt pressure to work beyond their safe capacity due to long hours or lack of rest days. Still more said they’d had to work alongside colleagues who were not properly trained.
When someone dies it costs money to find, hire, and then train a new person. So if the old person doesn’t die/quit you save money. If too many people die/quit you get a reputation and then you need to pay even more as people decide to work at McDonald’s rather than risk their life (or whatever you bad job experience is about.
the article is about these companies not spending enough on safety and training…
So if we get to a point where the job is quick to train for and the market is over-saturated with qualified, unemployed candidates, what then?