Let me try to explain then.
I, as a private individual, have a job that provides me with certain income. That income is nowhere near the amount needed to cover all my desires, so I have to budget it. After I pay for my food, clothes, electricity bills and housing, I have some left over that I can either spend on fun stuff, or tuck away in some sort of savings (stocks, socks, doesn't matter). It's usually a bit of both fun and savings. That savings is used for times when I need to buy a new washing machine, fix the car or I lose a job. I need to cut back on my pleasure spending so I have a safety net during the rainy days, because the government will not bail me out. With businesses, it's the same thing. No one will help a business overcome sudden loss of activity.
Unless they are a huge corporation that is just "too big to fail". Boeing will happily pay out hundreds of millions in bonuses per year to their senior management, but will not set aside anything for rainy days. When those rains come, they expect others to pull them out of the muck. I certainly can blame the management for prioritizing their private interests over the interests of the business and the employees.