Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Paying all employees the same salary caused therapists trauma
Paying all employees the same salary caused therapists trauma
Dec 25, 2025 3:48 AM

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
The Devil Doesn’t Like Institutions
“In a cynical age that tends to glorify ‘startups’ and celebrate anti-institutional suspicion, faith in institutions will sound dated, stodgy, old-fashioned, even (gasp) ‘conservative.’,” says James K.A. Smith. “Christians who are eager to be progressive, hip, relevant, and creative tend to buy into such anti-institutionalism, thus mirroring and mimicking wider cultural trends. . . And yet those same Christians are rightly concerned about mon good.” But here’s the thing: if you’re really passionate about fostering mon good, then you should...
Are Human Beings Simply A Collection Of Body Parts?
There is nothing simple about Bl. John Paul II’s writings, and yet, his work collectively called the Theology of the Body offers a remarkable chance to reflect on the unique creation that is man. In modern culture, we see humanity reduced to a collection of parts (a lung to transplant, a womb to be rented) or as an instrument to be used (for lust or for slavery.) The human body has e “treachery”, as George Orwell notes in 1984, not...
‘Tea Party Catholic:’ The Necessity of Faith and Liberty
Fr. C John McCloskey, research fellow at the Faith and Reason Institute, recently reviewed Sam Gregg’s Tea Party Catholic at the National Catholic Register. In “Life, Liberty and Faith,” McCloskey says, “Gregg builds an argument for free economy and human flourishing that is a must-read, regardless of your political affiliation or whether you are Catholic or a serious Christian concerned about the rapidly diminishing religious liberty in the United States.” McCloskey points out at the book focuses on the only...
Calhoun vs. Heinlein for the Soul of American Libertarianism
John C. Calhoun was a 19th century American vice president who supported slavery and championed state’s rights. Robert A. Heinlein was a 20th century American science-fiction writer who opposed racism and championed space policy. The pair aren’t often mentioned together, but Breitbart’s pseudonymous “Hamilton” claims they represent two kinds of libertarianism. Today in America, we see two kinds of libertarianism, which we might call “Calhounian” and “Heinleinian.” Both kinds believe in freedom, but they are very different in their emphasis—and...
How Would You Like An ‘Affordable Healthy Food Act?’
The government is now in the health care business. Trans fats may be on their way out, and New York is trying to tell us to stop buying buckets of soda to drink. Can you imagine a land of the “Affordable Healthy Food Act?” Jacqueline Isaacs can. Imagine with me, a hypothetical world where a politician was running for the office of President of the United States on the platform that everyone deserved a healthy diet. Not so far-fetched of...
Creation and the Heart of Man: ‘Orthodox and not Libertarian’
Today at Ethika Politika, Alfred Kentigern Siewers reviews Creation and the Heart of Man: An Orthodox Christian Perspective on Environmentalism, Acton’s recent Orthodox Christian social thought monograph by Fr. Michael Butler and Prof. Andrew Morriss. Siewers offers a nuanced and critical review, being well-read in the literature himself, and ultimately es the monograph as a missing voice in the broader conversation of Orthodox Christianity and creation care. Siewers writes, [I]n its introductory opening chapter, the authors clearly set forth their...
Mamas, Don’t Let Your Babies Grow Up To Be Newspaper Reporters. Let ‘Em Be Actuaries and Optometrists and Such.
What’s the deal with actuaries? Whenever a new list of the best jobs piled—like the rankings by Career Cast—they are always near the top of the list. What could really be so great about interpreting statistics to determine probabilities of accidents, sickness, and death, and loss of property from theft and natural disasters? And why have I never actually met an actuary? Are their jobs so exceedingly awesome that they don’t take time to associate with non-actuaries? Anyway, here are...
Where Is All That ‘Dark Money’ Coming From?
Your writer possesses well-meaning friends forever vigilant in my best interests. Most recently, one such kind soul sent an email alerting me to the dangers of so-called “dark money” in the political process. Believing himself on the side of the angels – and fully onside with activist nuns, priests and other religious – my friend sought my assistance in the fight against “evil” corporations participating in the political process. So I got the following in my inbox. And all I...
Hope, Success: With Obamacare, It’s All Relative
For one Obama supporter, Obamacare was such a relief, she wrote the President to thank him. The hope and success of Obamacare wasn’t all she thought it would be. ...
What Will Your Religious Liberty Cost You? Obamacare Edition
We know freedom isn’t free. And apparently, we are now going to find out exactly how much our religious freedom is going to cost. Matthew Clark at Charisma News says that “refusal to violate your faith” under Obamacare is going to cost you…a lot. If you value your faith;if you are one of the millions of Americans who believe that abortion pills cause the destruction of innocent, God-given human life; if you are an employer who believes that being forced...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved