Categories: Business & Finance, Changing Society, Government & Politics, Political Humor, Social Change, Society and Culture, Wall Street Tags: capitalism, political humor
CEOs are paid too much more than their average worker
By F. John Reh, About.com Guide
Pay for Performance
According to Business Week, the average CEO of a major corporation made 42 times the average hourly worker’s pay in 1980. By 1990 that had almost doubled to 85 times. In 2000, the average CEO salary reached an unbelievable 531 times that of the average hourly worker.
“Pay for performance”, tying executive compensation to the financial success of their company, has become very popular in the past decade. In the face of the largest bull market ever, that isn’t surprising. It also isn’t realistic. What CEO honestly believes that all or most of the appreciation in value of their company is due to their own talent?
ZD Net’s Total Compensation Vs. Total Return To Shareholders chart (no longer online), shows that total return to shareholders was higher for many companies whose CEO compensation was under $500,000 than for companies who paid their CEOs multi-million dollar compensation.
Workers Unite
The AFL-CIO Executive Paywatch site gives people a lot of information about what they consider “the excessive salaries, bonuses and perks of the CEOs of major corporations”. The site features a calculator that shows how your salary increase over the past five years compares to that of a CEO. They also give you tools to “take action to stop runaway CEO pay.”
Is It Justified?
John Mariotti, president and founder of The Enterprise Group, asks “CEO Pay: How Much is Too Much?” and answers the question himself. Citing Derek Bok, he points out that as business becomes more complex, the demand for top executives increases and thus they command greater and greater pay. He also noted that such huge awards do little to motivate these outstanding performers, who are generally more motivated by challenge.
Mike Hughlett, Staff Writer for PioneerPlanet, thinks the reason why CEO pay soars so high is that CEO’s pay generally is set by the compensation committee, usually comprised of other chief executives.
Graef Crystal, writing for the San Francisco Business Times, Uses Steven Jobs, co-founder of Apple Computer to prove his point on CEO compensation: the composition of a CEO’s pay package has nothing to do with his future performance and the CEO may not make all that much of a difference in whether the company is a success or a failure.
In her article “Lowering the Bar”, WSJ writer Joann S. Lublin notes “Pay for performance? Forget it.
Categories: Business & Finance, Changing Society, Social Change, Society and Culture, Wall Street Tags: F. John Reh, Overpaid CEOs, Pay for Performance
Sticking the public with the bill for the bankers’ crisis
by Naomi Klein
My city feels like a crime scene and the criminals are all melting into the night, fleeing the scene. No, I’m not talking about the kids in black who smashed windows and burned cop cars on Saturday.
I’m talking about the heads of state who, on Sunday night, smashed social safety nets and burned good jobs in the middle of a recession. Faced with the effects of a crisis created by the world’s wealthiest and most privileged strata, they decided to stick the poorest and most vulnerable people in their countries with the bill.
How else can we interpret the G20’s final communiqué, which includes not even a measly tax on banks or financial transactions, yet instructs governments to slash their deficits in half by 2013. This is a huge and shocking cut, and we should be very clear who will pay the price: students who will see their public educations further deteriorate as their fees go up; pensioners who will lose hard-earned benefits; public-sector workers whose jobs will be eliminated. And the list goes on. These types of cuts have already begun in many G20 countries including Canada, and they are about to get a lot worse.
Categories: Banking, Government & Politics, Social Change, Wall Street Tags: banking bailout, Naomi Klein
Below the Radar: HUD is Trying to Privatize and Mortgage Off All of America’s Public Housing
by GEORGE LAKOFF
The Obama Administration’s move to the right is about to give conservatives a victory they could not have anticipated, even under Bush. HUD, under Obama, submitted legislation called PETRA to Congress that would result in the privatization of all public housing in America.
The new owners would charge ten percent above market rates to impoverished tenants, money that would be mostly paid by the US government (you and me, the taxpayers). To maintain the property, the new owners would take out a mortgage for building repair and maintenance (like a home equity loan), with no cap on interest rates.
With rents set above market rates, the mortgage risk would be attractive to banks. Either they make a huge profit on the mortgages paid for by the government. Or if the government lowers what it will pay for rents, the property goes into foreclosure. The banks get it and can sell it off to developers.
Sooner or later, the housing budget will be cut back and such foreclosures will happen. The structure of the proposal and the realities of Washington make it a virtual certainty.
The banks and developers make a fortune, with the taxpayers paying for it. The public loses its public housing property. The impoverished tenants lose their apartments, or have their rents go way up if they are forced into the private market. Homelessness increases. Government gets smaller. The banks and developers win. It is a Bank Bonanza! The poor and the public lose.
And a precedent is set. The government can privatize any public property: Schools, libraries, national parks, federal buildings — just as has begun to happen in California, where the right-wing governor has started to auction off state property and has even suggested selling off the Supreme Court building.
The rich will get richer, the poor and public get poorer. And the very idea of the public good withers.
This is central to the conservative dream, in which there is no public good — only private goods. And it is a nightmare for democracy.
Categories: Business & Finance, Government & Politics, Wall Street Tags: Finance, George Lakoff, HUD
Milken’s Joel Kurtzman Discusses Wall Street Leadership: Video
March 11 (Bloomberg) — Joel Kurtzman, a senior fellow at the Milken Institute and author of author of “Common Purpose: How Great Leaders Get Organizations to Achieve the Extraordinary,” talks with Bloomberg Television about leadership on Wall Street. (This report is an excerpt. Source: Bloomberg)
Duration : 0:0:26
Categories: Wall Street Tags: All, Audio, Banking, Bloomberg, Company, credit, Crisis, crunch, Discusses, economic, economy, Financial, Firms, Joel, Kurtzman, leadership, Media, Milken's, news, securities, Services, states, street, Team, Television, U.S., united, us, video, Visual, Wall
Wall Street, U.S. Government Await AIG’s Next Move: Video
March 9 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Sheila Dharmarajan reports on the outlook for business ventures for American International Group Inc. (Source: Bloomberg)
Duration : 0:1:33
Categories: Wall Street Tags: Actions, AIG's, All, Audio, Await, Banking, Bankruptcies, Bloomberg, consumer, corporate, credit, Crisis, crunch, English, Finance, Financial, Goods, Government, insurance, markets, Media, Mergers, Move:, Multimedia, news, Next, Retail, Services, street, Team, U.S., us, video, Visual, Wall










