@1uul - the statement that the company exists only to further interests of shareholders is a fallacy. This is a complicated subject and I'd agree that this statement is widely accepted nowadays, yet, it does not make it valid. There are multiple interconnected interests and reasons why a company exists - these include customers, employees, shareholders, society, the nation. You take one out of the equitation and the concept crumbles.
Look at how companies behaved from 1940 to 1980 when Jack Welch invented mass layoffs and 'the shareholder first mantra' - before that, the nation and the worker were focal points of every company around - and the market worked, the profits grew, the country prospered. And then things changed, Welch nuked 170K employees and focused on the shareholder. How well did this serve GE? It was amazing for about 15 to 20 years, every year they would cut more, squeeze that extra penny needed to boost the EPS ratio. Yet, this concept has its limits and at some points you cannot cut any more - and where is GE now, that amazing icon of American entrepreneurship.
Sorry for going a bit off tangent here, but I believe that things will reshuffle again - you just cannot keep screwing the worker indefinitely - you got to keep things in balance and the balance has been disrupted for 3+ decades now.
To prove all of this you do not have to examine more than the outcome(s) of the latest presidential race - on both left and right there are hundreds of millions of angry people, and they are not getting any happier...
So, let's continue to make the shareholder happy and screw the worker - it'll end in tears...