If the person (or persons) didn't own the company how would the employees have a job? Someone has to be at the top overseeing the actions of the company. They may not do any physical labor but that doesn't mean they aren't working. The people at the top or responsible for how much the people they employ produce.
El duderino-
This was disproven in Argentina several years ago.
You may remember there was quite a ruckus in the early part of this decade about how Argentina was broke and people were rioting in the streets (they had the temerity to get upset over the fact that they couldn't afford both food AND luxuries like running water and electricity for their families... what a bunch of whiners hey??)
So what hapenned? Well, many businesses went belly up. Many more businesses were bought out by big investment companies on the prowl for cheap deals, at which point they were ripped apart and sold off or pumped and dumped.
So, you had empty, rusting factories all over the place with unemployed folks staring at the empty factories. All of the "idea" men, the managers and executives and investment banker-providers-of-capital had got their pound of flesh and made off while many Argentinians were sitting there unemployed going "wtf?!?!"
The solution? The workers went back to work. They quite literally walked back into the factories and started producing again, with ZERO money in their pockets to start off with and all of the previous "idea men" managers nowhere to be found. Who'd imagine that workers could co-ordinate their actions without the blessing of a western-educated MBA??? No venture capital or investment or IMF loans at all. How they accomplished this is actually pretty easy to understand:
Factory worker calling natural resource producer on the phone:
"Hello, we've recently re-started production at factory XYZ because we were all unemployed and noticed this big factory just wasting away. We also realize that you guys, working in the (insert natural resource here- mining/lumber/farming) industry also are out of jobs because both of our glorious leaders took their capital and got out of dodge. So, if you can give us resources, we can build widgets which we can then sell, and give you your fair share of the money. This way we're happy because we're back at work, you're happy because you're back at work, and since we build an actual product that people will buy we're guaranteed some form of revenue. It may not be the kind of revenue that would please shareholders demanding a ridiculous year after-year exponential growth, but it should be enough to cover our costs, pay our people and maybe have a little left over in the end. And heck, it sure beats sitting around watching the paint dry!!!"
Now, the above example worked out because this is all part of the real economy. A tangible good produced or service rendered.
As stevendedalus has correctly pointed out earlier on, much of the economy and perceived value out there has been decoupled from reality through derivatives, in the bigger scheme something called the FIRE economy. FIRE stands for finance, insurance, real estate, and contrary to ideology and dogma, the FIRE economy is always damaging to, or worst case scenario parasitic of the real economy which deals in goods produced or services rendered.
Cutting out all of the utterly obnoxious terminology behind Collateral-Default-Swaps, derivatives, debentures, structural-adjustment-financing, Master-Liquidity-Enhancement-Conduit and a thousand other terms invented purely to confuse and intimidate you, the world of finance today serves a purpose contrary to the real economy. That purpose is:
To Ignore Reality.
That's about as simple as it can get. Modern day finance is an attempt to ignore the reality of the situation on the ground, thereby allowing money to change hands and magically create more money, with NO actual good produced or service rendered in the real economy.
Now finance, at it's roots, was actually a support structure of the economy. Emphasis on the word SUPPORT. But, because we've so royally screwed the economy here in North America, we've had to obscure that with the financialization with everything.
Did you know that the last time the middle class made the most amount of money in north america was in the early 70's? Ever since then, adjusted for inflation average wages have fallen. We got rid of the factories and replaced them with shopping malls as the engine of the economy. Since consumer spending is now the lynchpin holding everything together, and wages have been falling for almost 40 years, how did we keep consumers shopping?
Cue the financial behemoth!!!!
Cheap, unlimited credit for everyone!!
Sounds a little unsustainable to me.
In fact, it's starting to unravel right now.
This is the great innovation of the idea men, the movers and shakers to whom supposedly billion dollar bonuses must be paid to ensure they continue their services that no one else, supposedly, is capable of doing properly.
They've had their chance. What we see unfolding now, with the constant bailouts (over 4 trillion now and growing) is a feeble, pathetic attempt to continue ignoring reality and a stubborn denial of the reality that you cannot ignore the laws of physics. We've been artificially catapulting our economy and quality of life higher and higher, with nothing underpinning it to support that growth. Enter the smartest guys in the room, men like Paulson who now will continue to pour public money into keeping private companies going just a little longer....
just....one...more...rally!!!!