Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Paying all employees the same salary caused therapists trauma
Paying all employees the same salary caused therapists trauma
Jan 1, 2026 8:38 PM

A psychotherapy practice’s year-long experiment with paying every employee an equal salary has disproved the central economic thesis of socialism.

Calvin Benton co-founded Spill, a British firm that offers psychological counseling via online technology like Zoom. He met another of pany’s founders a decade earlier while taking an economics class together. It’s not known whether the failure of pensation model came in spite of, or because of, their economics instructors.

As Benton and his four co-workers got Spill off the ground, they opted to take part in a revolutionary trial: Each one of them would receive the same annual salary of £36,000 (approximately $49,240 U.S.). At first, “there were five people, and everyone was pretty much contributing the same,” Benton told the BBC.

The initial returns were promising. Even as the 2020 pandemic closed thousands of small shops, Benton’s business boomed. COVID-19 demanded remote work, which caused burnout among some employees. For others, the lockdown orders themselves created unbearable stress.

The limits of the UK’s National Health Service (NHS) also padded Benton’s bottom line. “More and more firms are paying for their staff to get therapy for their problems, because it’s getting harder to get therapy on the NHS,” he told the BBC. The coronavirus outbreak forced the always-stressed NHS to pause even more “elective” services than usual. Advocates of single-payer healthcare, take note.

Spill’s cup runneth over. Soon, it had to add more staff. That’s when things began to fall apart.

The young startup had a hard time retaining staff members whose expertise yielded greater productivity (like software developers, who make far more than £36,000 annually in London). On the other hand, it received a glut of applications for clerical positions (which pay an average of £10.71 an hour, or £22,276 annually). Salespeople also wanted a more mission based on the percentage of their sales, which rewards their efforts and ingenuity.

Benton realized the laws of economics had asserted themselves. He said:

“When we grew the team, we started to have some people who contributed more than others. You had some people who worked longer hours than others. The question started to arise: should this person be paid the same amount as me?

“That caused a conflict in the team and a conversation in the team about whether this experiment was right to continue.”

After a year, Calvin’s staff revolted, and he instituted a more typical pay scale based on value creation and seniority.

Benton said his experiment in leveling economic inequities proved a “disappointment.”

“We wanted to do something which was democratic and egalitarian,” Benton said. “But sometimes traditional practices are there for a reason. Sometimes you don’t have to reinvent the mould on everything.”

Ultimately, Benton and his colleagues verified a well-known fact of human nature: People reject socialism, because it is inherently unfair. Why should the most diligent and productive worker receive the same pay as the laziest and least productive? The notion violates our natural sense of justice.

Researchers have explained the psychological and moral forces work here. An April 2017studypublished inNature Human Behavior found“that when fairness and equality clash, people prefer fair inequality over unfair equality.” Unequal work merits unequal rewards. “[W]hen one recipient has done more work, six-year-olds believe that he or she should receive more resources, even if equal pay is an option,” it stated.

Economics takes the reality of human behavior as its starting point. Friedrich von Hayek noted the tension between economic equality and equality of e in The Constitution of Liberty. Unequal es result from unequal effort, he said. “Equality before the law and material equality are therefore not only different but are in conflict with each other; and we can achieve either one or the other, but not both at the same time,” he wrote. “The equality before the law which freedom requires leads to material inequality.”

The Spill experiment disproved the supply aspect of socialism. Despite Benton’s best intentions, paying people the same amount of money for different es could not – and cannot – work. Panera’s failed line of pay-what-you-can bistros, known as “Panera Cares,” disproved the demand aspect of socialism. Together, they underscore that people are neither willing to produce more than others for the same pay nor consume less than others if they believe es at someone else’s expense.

Neither pany nor a nation can long endure if it expects people to violate the laws of economics and human nature.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Video: John Stonestreet on the gospel in a culture of identity crisis
The changes in western culture over the past decadesreflect a major shift in how we think of the nature of reality and, in particular, the human person. In light of these changes, how is theChurch to address the deep issues of the day without ing captive to political ideologies? How can it recover and advance a Biblical vision on humanity? On March 30, John Stonestreet – President of the Colson Center for Christian Worldview – delivered an address as part...
Booker T. Washington on the beauty and dignity of work
“My plan was to have [my students]…taught to see not only utility in labour, but beauty and dignity.” –Booker T. Washington We live in a time of unbounding prosperity. Opportunities are wider, work is easier, and innovation continues to accelerate at a break-neck pace. Yet standing amid such blessings, it can be easy to forget or neglect the basic freedoms and philosophy of life that got us here in the first place. Alas, in a culture propelled by pleasure, materialism,...
Why government regulation of airline fares created ‘quality waste’
Note: This is post #28 in a weekly video series on basic microeconomics. If you flew on an airplane prior to 1978, when the government regulated air fares, you probably noticed the high quality of air travel—wide seats, good food, friendly service. But as economist Alex Tabarrok explains, that was actually a bad thing for customers since the government imposed prices floors created “quality waste.” (If you find the pace of the videos too slow, I’d mend watching them at...
United Airlines and the economist who solved the overbooking problem
This weekend a video went viral that shows a passenger on a United Airlines flight from Chicago to Louisville being forcibly removed from the plane before takeoff at O’Hare International Airport. According to an eyewitness of the incident: Passengers were told at the gate that the flight was overbooked and United, offering $400 and a hotel stay, was looking for one volunteer to take another flight to Louisville at 3 p.m. Monday. Passengers were allowed to board the flight, Bridges...
The responsibility of entrepreneurs for a flourishing, just society
Embed from Getty Images During a recent trip to Chile, Acton’s Samuel Gregg spoke to Diario Financiero about the rights and responsibilities of entrepreneurs. Business’ contributions to the well-being of society are enormous, but explaining the good they do can be a challenge. “Businesses have a great story to tell,” Gregg laments, “but they’re not very good at telling it.” Also contributing to general distrust is that corporate scandals tend to put all the focus of on a few bad...
Why the rule of law matters for human flourishing
In our efforts to reduce poverty, spur economic growth, and cultivate the conditions for human flourishing, the conversation can quickly be consumed with debates over material wealth and the allocation of physical resources. Yet economists are increasingly recognizing the role “intangible assets” — unseen forces that propel humans toward increased innovation and collaboration. These include a range of underlying features, from basic honesty and virtue to the cultural appetite for risk and experimentation. But one of the most prominent has...
What Christians can learn from Utah’s economic success
How do we move closer to ending poverty and expanding opportunity in America? Does a single solution or road map even exist? In a widely cited study, the Brookings Institute’s Isabel Sawhill and Ron Haskins famously argued that at least one predictable path is evident. “The poverty rate among families with children could be lowered by 71 percent if the pleted high school, worked full-time, married, and had no more than two children,” they argue. Skeptics and critics abound, but...
Kirk on Acton on Revolution
Russell Kirk was a luminary of American Conservatism, philosopher, historian, and novelist of horror and suspense. In addition to being a true renaissance man he was, with his wife Annette, an early friend and supporter of the Acton Institute. It was at Acton that Kirk gave his last public lecture on the topic of ‘Lord Acton on Revolution’ on January 10, 1994. He would be called home to the Lord later that year. Kirk pulls no punches in his lecture...
Lord Acton Meets Lord Krishna: Yoga as the Reign of Conscience
In North America ‘Yoga’ is synonymous with exercise consisting of a series of postures as well as form-fitting and fortable pants. But there’s much more: it’s a philosophy deeply grounded in conscience as the source of virtue. Yoga is one of the six orthodox schools of Indian philosophy which accept and rely on the Vedas, the most ancient scriptures of Hinduism. Yogic ideas of conscience are strikingly similar to the those of Lord Acton in particular and the Christian tradition...
How global trade enriched your Palm Sunday
This weekendmarked Palm Sunday, the beginning of Holy Week, when memorate Christ’s entrance into Jerusalem en route to His voluntary death, burial, and resurrection. On that day, Christians of all backgrounds bless and wave palm branches in imitation of the crowds who cried “Hosanna” as He rode a donkey into the city. But not all Christians use palm branches. Palms cannot grow in the harsh climate of northern Slavic nations such as Russia, Ukraine, and Poland. Instead, Catholics and Orthodox...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved