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Are Corporate Titans Really Worth the Billions They Suck In?

By Sarah Anderson and Sam Pizzigati, AlterNet. Posted September 12, 2007.


Is the labor of corporate CEOs really hundreds of times more valuable than the labor of other leaders?

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In the span of just a few weeks, two enterprises that have become institutional fixtures on the American scene -- Chrysler, the Big Three automaker, and the Ford Foundation, the philanthropic pace-setter -- have named new top executives.

Neither of the two has any experience in the industry he now labors.

Robert Nardelli, the new Chrysler CEO, has never before worked for a car company. He comes out of General Electric and a brief, unhappy stint at Home Depot. Luis UbiƱas, the new Ford Foundation president, has never before run a nonprofit. He spent the last 18 years at McKinsey & Company, the consulting firm, working mostly with the high-tech sector.

No matter. In the United States today, you don't need to have experience in the work of an enterprise to lead it. You just need to be a leader. You need to have demonstrated a capacity to innovate and inspire, analyze and imagine. If you have these leadership skills, you are considered able to perform successfully as a leader almost anywhere. A general can become a school superintendent. A media entrepreneur can become a mayor. A credit card executive can run a computer company.

Leadership, in short, has become a marketable skill set. We have academic centers that teach leadership, headhunters who search for it. Leadership skills, and leadership skills alone, can make you an eminently hot commodity in the job market.

But this leadership market operates in a curious fashion. It has no "going rate." Some individuals with leadership skills in our contemporary United States -- those who sit atop America's business enterprises -- are capturing far more compensation for their labors than those in other fields who appear to hold the same exact leadership skill set.

We have just helped complete the 14th annual edition of Executive Excess, the Institute for Policy Studies analysis that typically concentrates on the pay gap between America's top corporate executives and our nation's workers. This time around, we took a somewhat different approach. We didn't just compare CEO and worker compensation. We compared America's business leaders with leaders elsewhere in American society, leaders in sectors ranging from nonprofits and the military to the federal executive and legislative branches.

What did we find? The pay gap between business leaders today and their leadership counterparts in other walks of American life is now running wider -- often phenomenally wider -- than the pay gap a generation ago between business leaders and average American workers.

Back around 1980, big-time corporate CEOs in the United States took home just over 40 times the pay of average American workers. Today's average American CEO from a Fortune 500 company makes 364 times an average worker's pay and over 70 times the pay of a four-star Army general.

Another example of our contemporary leadership pay gap: Last year, the top 20 earners in the most lucrative corner of America's business sector, the private equity and hedge fund world, pocketed 680 times more in rewards for their labors than the nation's 20 highest-paid leaders of nonprofit institutions pocketed for theirs -- and 3,315 times more than the top 20 officials of the federal executive branch, an august group that includes the President of the United States.

The gaps become even more profound when we look at the leaders of Congress, an institution whose pay policies have down through the years regularly fueled public outrage. Last year, the pay for the 20 highest-ranking leaders in Congress, taken together, totaled less than the personal earnings of the corporate CEO who ranked 348 th in the Associated Press's compensation survey.

Once upon a time, we didn't have this sort of leadership pay gap in the United States. Indeed, into the 1970s, typical big-time CEOs made only modestly more than Presidents of the United States.

One big reason why: steeply graduated federal income tax rates. Throughout the 1950s, the Eisenhower years, the top marginal tax rate on income over $400,000 hovered at 91 percent. In the 1960s and 1970s, that top rate never dropped below 70 percent on income over $200,000.

These tax rates sent corporate boards a powerful cultural message. If they were paying their top executives over several hundred thousand dollars a year, they were paying too much. And corporations by and large heeded that message. CEO paychecks didn't start soaring into the compensation stratosphere until the early 1980s, with the coming of the Reagan Revolution.

In 1981, Ronald Reagan's first year in office, the top federal marginal rate on America's highest incomes dropped to 50 percent, then fell again five years later to 28 percent. The top rate has bounced around, within a narrow window, ever since and now stands at 35 percent, just half the top rate in place during the Johnson, Nixon, Ford, and Carter administrations.

These top rates, to be sure, don't reflect what high-earners actually pay in taxes, once they exploit all the loopholes they can find. In 2005, the most recent year with IRS data available, the highest earning 0.01 percent of tax filers, all 13,776 of them, reported an average $27.3 million in income. They paid just 20.9 percent of that in federal income tax.


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Sarah Anderson directs the Global Economy Project at the Institute for Policy Studies. Sam Pizzigati , an associate fellow at the Institute, edits Too Much, an online weekly on excess and inequality. They are co-authors of "Executive Excess: The Staggering Social Cost of U.S. Business Leadership."

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A Boom is comming
Posted by: Sum Won on Sep 12, 2007 7:47 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We emerged from the stagnancy of the seventies because a new consumer market (pc) was created that fueled the growth in information technologies which then led to an economic recovery and a sustained period of growth.

We have lost the first mover advantage in IT. Margins have been greatly reduced as competitors all over the world enter the market. Without these high margins our economic growth is beginning to stagnate.

Our Titans of Industry foresaw this and already had a strategy that has been unfolding during the past twenty years. (Thats why they get the big bucks). Government co-operated as they too could see the benefits. They accelerated wage increases for the executive and other upper classes and reduced their taxes so as to create a consumer base for the next big thing!

Yes the"ultimate" experience is now on offer: "extreme" luxury. "The democratization of luxury had to be challenged by a new tier of aspirational people." Extreme luxury is targeted at individuals with more than $30 million in net financial assets.

We're the first with the critical mass, the will and culture needed to lead this emerging market. This will create a boom from which we all will ultimately benefit.

Remember it was our Titans that first recognized that Trickle down didn't work because of the lack of obscenely wealthy people that could afford to throw their money around. They solved that problem and thats why they deserve billions.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: A Boom is comming Posted by: vertical
» RE: A Boom is comming Posted by: carolcarre
» RE: A Boom is comming Posted by: Sum Won
» RE: A Boom is comming Posted by: thekidde
» RE: A Boom is comming Posted by: CommonDreamer
» RE: A Boom is comming Posted by: CommonDreamer
It's the street.
Posted by: ahmlco on Sep 12, 2007 12:15 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Wall Street, that is. Entice the right "name" or names to run your company, and Wall Street and the market may reward you by doubling your stock price. Lose a "name", and your stock may plummet.

In addition, like all things involved with names there's competition to get them on your team. Works the same for business as it does for sports or entertainment or whatever. And if enough people bid on a "limited" resource what happens? Prices go up.

How valuable is, say, Steve Jobs to Apple? What would happen if he said tomorrow that he was quitting? Further, how easily can he be replaced? CAN he be replaced? Look at how well Apple fared under Sculley and Spindler and Amelio. Obviously not everyone can do that job, and do it well.

Which leads us to the conceit inherent in the author's article that there's no real difference between the people at the top and bottom, and as such the "average" employee could easily do the CEO job if just given the chance. Heck, one only has to look at small business failure rates to eliminate that notion. If the average guy can't keep a corner bookstore or gas station open, how well will he or she fare running a major multinational?

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: It's the street. Posted by: CommonDreamer
Read the article
Posted by: nazrafel on Sep 12, 2007 1:06 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The author is not stating there is NO difference between line workers and the CEO, just asking the question "should CEOs be paid more that 350x what the average worker is making? Do they really add THAT much value?" and "What does the current stratospheric CEO compensation packages mean for business and non profit/gov compensation in the future?"
No one has a problem with the leaders being paid MORE, it's about how MUCH more. If the average worker's salary is $40,000/year, then something reasonable for a CEO might be 50x that amount- $2 million- which doesn't seem to shabby. Instead, as the author states, we are seeing CEOs making over 350 times what the average worker makes. Again, using $40k as the average salary; at 350x that amount the CEO's compensation would be $14 million a year. This is money that could have been reinvested in business development- so I don't think that paying a CEO for (his) name is really an investment & benefit to the shareholders, quite the opposite.

What I am wondering is, given the number of overseas employees that companies now have, I wonder IF the proposed government contract measure includes them in the calculations of the CEO's compensation? I.e.- if you are paying your software developer in India $15,000 USD a year & has a lower salary than the American employees, will that count as "the lowest compensated employee" and then the CEO's compensation will be compared to that? Seems like it might be a good backdoor method to help prevent American jobs going overseas. (Or at least force them to either pay their foreign employees more or divest themselves of overseas operations entirely). Hm.

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» Bottom line Posted by: ahmlco
thekidde
Posted by: thekidde on Sep 13, 2007 11:50 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Having worked for and been screwed over by medium-sized companies whose over-compensated executives were destructive of productivity, morale and profitability and whose actions, purposeful for self-enriching, eventually lead to acquisition, downsizing and dumbsizing of a very credible and once competitive company. Thousands of people lost while few gained. This must stop. Chrysler, for whom I still do training as an outside vendor, is now saddled with yet another executive, just like Lasorda, who can't spell manufacturing or processes, he can only look at numbers and react. Bad move - sell your stock.

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