• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Bitterroot Star

Bitterroot Valley's best source for local news!

  • Home
  • News
  • Sports
  • Opinion
  • Classifieds
    • Buildings
    • Farm & Garden
    • For Rent
    • For Sale
    • Free
    • Help Wanted
    • Real Estate
    • Sales/Auctions
    • Services
  • Legal Notices
  • Obituaries
  • Calendar
  • Services
    • Letter to the Editor
    • Place Classified Ad
    • Submit a Press Release
    • Contact Us
    • About Us
  • Subscribe

The velocity of money

March 14, 2017 by Guest Post

It’s hard to ignore the economic circumstances of those who work for minimum wage in a community like the Bitterroot Valley. Vacant mini-malls and empty downtown storefronts prove many local companies go out of business because we, the working poor, have no purchasing power. We shop at thrift stores and garage sales. We cannot afford much beyond necessities. And keeping what we have, whether it’s our old cars running or paying property taxes, becomes tougher each year.
Capitalism gave us hope, made us believe if we worked hard, we too could share in the American Dream. Now, wages are stagnant, but not the cost of living. Now, eating out means grabbing fast-food, not dining in a nice restaurant. We don’t take vacations or purchase small luxuries. We live paycheck to paycheck. There is no sick-leave, there are no paid vacation days. Christmas bonuses are rare.
Thankfully, this is not true of every business owner. In Forbes, Sir Richard Branson said, “This [Virgin Atlantic] isn’t a company that just talks about putting employees first or glibly claims that our people are our greatest asset.”
Virgin America CEO, David Cush, stated, “the airline seeks out people who are 1) positive 2) friendly and 3) who see life as ‘glass half-full.’ Finding the right people is 90 percent of the battle. People first; profits second.”
In the same Forbes article, Gary Kelly, the CEO of Southwest Airlines, stated, “The difference at Southwest is this: Everything begins and ends with our people. If we keep our employees happy and engaged, they will keep our customers happy, who will reward us with their loyalty.” (Carmine Gallo, Forbes, September 10, 2013)
Sadly, most Hamilton employers follow a different business plan. While they thrive, we struggle to survive. They alone can afford new cars, second or vacation homes, boats, recreational vehicles and luxury vacations, while their employees struggle just to have enough fuel to drive to work between paydays.
In the past, if a business was profitable, the owner knew its success was due in large part to hard working employees. In 1914, Henry Ford doubled employee wages. Company treasurer James Couzens stated, “We want those who have helped us to produce this great institution and are helping to maintain it to share in our prosperity.” (The Learning Network, January 2012). The Wall Street Journal chastised Ford, writing Ford committed “an economic blunder,” but within two years Ford’s profit doubled. The wage increase reduced the company’s high turnover rate by retaining its best employees. Savvy business owners know success is a team effort and show their appreciation by compensating employees for their loyalty and hard work.
When a business owner makes money, and shares the profits with employees, the entire community benefits. For Artie T. Demoulas, owner of the Market Basket groceries, people before profit was not just a slogan. He incentivized employees with profit sharing and stock options. Teenagers went to work for Artie T., and often stayed with the chain their entire careers.
Not just survival, but quality of life in small town America depends on employers who are willing to share their profits with the employees who help them accumulate and sustain their wealth. Loyalty, prized by employers, must work both ways or it becomes servitude.
Jim Casey, who founded UPS over 110 years ago, believed, “The measure of your success will be the degree to which you build up others who work with you.” Casey’s business acumen made UPS a Forbes Top Fifty Business and made Casey wealthy, but not at the expense of his employees.
Financial advisor Charles Payne touts the economic theory known as the “Velocity of Money.” Payne believes that if a person has five extra dollars to spend, he will invest it in his community by making a purchase, which helps another store owner, its employees and the product’s manufacturers.
As our own ability to purchase goods declines, local businesses will become more dependent on tourism dollars. But the more money people in a community earn, the more they can spend, and the more invigorated the local economy becomes, strengthening us all: the velocity of money; people before profit. Employers, it begins or ends here locally, with you.
Robin St. Germaine
Corvallis

Share this:

Filed Under: Opinion

Primary Sidebar

Search This Website

Search this website…

Local Info

  • Bitterroot Chamber of Commerce
  • Ravalli County
  • Ravalli County Economic Development Authority
  • City of Hamilton
  • Town of Stevensville
  • Town of Darby
  • Bitterroot Public Library
  • North Valley Public Library
  • Stevensville Community Foundation
  • Ravalli County Council on Aging
  • Bitterroot Producers Directory
  • Ravalli County Schools
  • Real Estate
  • Montana Works

Like us

Read our e-edition!

Montana Info

  • Montana Ski Report
  • Montana Fish, Wildlife, & Parks
  • National Parks in Montana
  • Montana Wildfires – INCIWEB
  • US Forest Service – Missoula
  • Firewise USA
  • Recreation.gov

Check Road Conditions

Road Conditions

Footer

Services

  • Place Classified Ad
  • Submit a Press Release
  • Letter to the Editor
  • Submit an Event
  • Subscribe
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Our location:

PO Box 133

115 W. 3rd Street
Stevensville, MT  59870
Phone: (406) 777-3928
Fax: (406) 777-4265

Archives – May 2011 to Present

Archives Prior to May 2011

Click here for archives prior to May 2011.

The Bitterroot Star Newspaper Co: ISSN 1050-8724 (Print) ISSN 2994-0273 (Online)
Copyright © 2026 · Bitterroot Star · Maintenance · Site by Linda Lancaster at Bitterroot Web Designs