No, but companies are all about making things into money. That's why they choose a number of subjects (and degrees) that they deem useful and disregard everything else.
What people fail to understand is that a degree in the humanities also provides qualifications other than "let me tell you about the depiction of French rats in late medieval English clay paintings." However, these skills are not seen as being easily converted into revenue and thus ignored.
Such skills include independent problem solving, a high degree of organisation, formulation and proof of theories, descriptive and abstract work etc.
However, if you have an engineer who builds you parts for a car or a website or a backend or what not, you can immidiately slap a price tag on it and give more money to your shareholders.