I always figure that if your business doesn't make enough money to pay your essential employees enough to live on you literally don't have a business, you have a charity masquerading as a business.
I'll except early startups from this. Maybe.
A lot of this relies on "rational actors" though. Not referring to your perspective exclusively, mind you.
I have caught glimpses of this mythical creature on occasion in the wild. The bulk of my experience with them is only in clinical settings :9.
I like trash/sanitation as a go-to example of how disconnected we are from giving fair approximation of value to the service.
Giant trucks squeezing down tightly packed old residential streets. People performing enormous feats of athletic prowess for hours on end (that would have most Americans wheezing with chest pains in 10 minutes). Then an entire reclamation plant process that absolutely involves material physics and biological sciences.
I'm not saying the entry level needs a degree. But certainly a healthy respect for the processes on par with a research assistant doing data entry.
Do they know what it means or how to interpret it? Perhaps not.
Should they be able to adhere to process, exercise care in accuracy, maybe form an intuitive sense of patterns leading true or false? Absolutely.
Even high cost of living areas the average seems to be about $40/mo. (£32.68) per family to stick 2 bags of solid waste on the curb every week and never worry about it again.
Calculate your own time in sorting the trash into a dozen groupings, hauling it to a dump, checking in on the scales, proceeding around the facility to the dozen piles, checking back out on on the scales, and returning home.
Let's say it's half the cost that way. $20/mo (£16.34). Assume a month of your trash, how long will what I described above take you?
At 2.5 hours, you're getting down to minimum wage territory already.
End result: One has to assume their own time and resources worthless in order to declare the same of someone else's.
ETA: sorry for the U.S. figures in a U.K. discussion, I've added appropriate currency equivalents. Our federal minimum wage is $7.25 (£5.92). High cost of living areas are around $11/hr. (£9)