Facebook To Give $1,000 Bonuses To Each of Its Employees To Deal With Coronavirus Fallout (cnbc.com) 26
Facebook on Tuesday told employees that it would give each of them $1,000 bonuses in an effort to support its workforce working remotely as they wait out the coronavirus pandemic. From a report: Facebook employs nearly 45,000 full-time workers, according to a January financial filing, but it also employs several thousands more contract workers. It is unclear if those contractors will also receive a bonus. Facebook isn't the only tech company providing cash bonuses to workers. Workday announced Monday it would pay cash bonuses worth two weeks of pay to its employees. Facebook on Tuesday also announced a $100 million program to help small businesses impacted by COVID-19. The program will provide up to 30,000 eligible small business with "cash grants and ad credits to help during this challenging time."
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This is the perfect time for the government to be helping in this way though. The government can borrow money very cheaply compared to an individual or small business. Remember that the government is our tool, it is supposed to work for us and we collectively need assistance right now.
Even the Conservative Party in the UK is pumping billions and billions into propping up small businesses and even the most hard right newspapers like the Daily Mail and Telegraph are saying they should be putting in even more.
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If you do it properly in the long run it shouldn't cost much at all, because those bail-outs are not free money. The government is buying a stake in each company and will eventually sell it off.
When it did that with GM it eventually sold it off for $10bn less than it paid for it. The rule should be it only gets sold when it pays for itself. Companies like GM don't want to be part government owned and will work hard to push up their share price so the government sells. The problem is you have idiots screamin
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Don't get upset (Score:2)
They'll suffer enough for you.
Hmm, does everyone really need that? (Score:3, Insightful)
Let's be honest the developers and white collar (or maybe it's hoodie) side most likely make good money to start with. It's all the behind scene personnel that could use the bonus. Plus $1,000 is more likely closer to $600 after all the taxes. So maybe they should have narrowed it down to giving $2k (or more) to just those that aren't making coin.
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I imagine most FB employees can just work from home, so they don't even have an interruption in their income, which makes this completely pointless.
bonuses = a lot of tax! (Score:2)
bonuses = a lot of tax!
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bonuses = a lot of tax!
Are you implying they should do nothing because of the tax burden the extra money places on the employees?
What is your point?
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So...they get 75% of $1000? Still coming out ahead.
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Aren't you the optimist.
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If this money is taxed on a higher bracket than that, they should be making enough money to have some put away.
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Drop in a bucket? (Score:3, Interesting)
Facebook on Tuesday told employees that it would give each of them $1,000 bonuses in an effort to support its workforce working remotely as they wait out the coronavirus pandemic.
It is unclear if those contractors will also receive a bonus
I really have to question the usefulness of this, beyond being a PR move. Given how much I've heard some interns make at Facebook [cnbc.com], this just sounds like extra pocket change being given out to already-rich employees.
It would seem more beneficial to give those "bonuses" out to their contractors (many of which end up sleeping in their vehicles in parking lots [cnbc.com]) instead.
Seems silly to me. (Score:1)
Either their ad revenue skyrocketed while everyone is home OR did the taxpayer/government fund this behind the scenes?
Facebook doesn't pay any fucking taxes (Score:4, Insightful)
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Tax (Score:1)
So did a columbian drug cartel (Score:2)
Coincidence?
Huh? (Score:2)
Um... Why? I assume most Facebook employees can work remote. Being a tech company, they are probably already paid decently. Why do they need an extra $1000? If they are working from home, they aren't commuting, paying for gas, tolls, train tickets, etc. They are probably eating more at home, going out less, spending less money...
The people that really need that money are all of the service workers who run the restaurants and theaters and gyms and such that the Facebook employees have probably all stopped go
A Better Idea (Score:1)