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Former CEO: Executive Pay Is 'A Fraud'

POSTED BY: NIKI2
UPDATED: Sunday, February 16, 2014 07:29
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Saturday, February 15, 2014 1:51 PM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


Quote:

You can blame the stagnant economy on a "handful of women and men" who run the country's largest companies. And that's according to a man who used to be one of those people.

Executive pay has gotten so out of hand, former AT&T Broadband CEO Leo Hindery told HuffPost Live on Thursday, that it has caused a "structural breakdown of the meritocracy of our nation."

Hindery pointed out that, even as CEO pay has skyrocketed in recent decades, it has not "trickled down" to workers, who must increasingly borrow money to finance their spending. That dynamic helped set the stage for the most recent recession and helps explain today's sluggish recovery.

Fortune 500 CEOs now make more than 200 times what their average workers make, according to Bloomberg data. That ratio has increased by 1,000 percent since 1950 ( http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-04-30/ceo-pay-1-795-to-1-multiple-o
f-workers-skirts-law-as-sec-delays.html
). As CEO pay has exploded, worker pay has stagnated: Workers have not had a real cost-of-living increase since the 1960s, Hindery argued.

And these CEOs are not exactly earning their exorbitant pay, said Hindery.

"It's a fraud," the former executive said. "It's born out of cronyism."

That cronyism is demonstrated in a new analysis of executive-pay data ( http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/02/13/data-ceo-pay_n_4780937.html) showing the compliance of corporate boards in approving CEO pay, regardless of corporate performance. Those directors are themselves well-paid for their vigorous rubber-stamping.

The problem, Hindery said, isn't just that the rich are getting richer. The tragedy, he said, is the rise of the low-wage workforce. Half of the jobs created in the past three years have been low-paying ( http://edition.presstv.ir/detail.fa/303341.html) while the wealthiest Americans continue to capture record earnings.



The federal minimum wage, which stands at $7.25, is worth much less today than was in 1968 ( http://www.epi.org/publication/unfinished-march-overview/?ncid=edlinku
saolp00000008
). And all recent efforts to raise it have been stalled by Congress.

It's no wonder most of us are feeling entirely fed up. Two-third of Americans think CEO pay is out of hand, according to a recent poll ( https://today.yougov.com/news/2014/02/10/poll-results-one-percent/), which also found that a majority of respondents thing the government should be doing more to help the poor.

Hindery would agree. After all, rising income inequality is putting a damper on the economy as a whole.

"The only time the U.S. economy and any of the developed economies prosper is when there's a vibrant middle class that grows from the bottom up," he said. "We've trashed that whole principle." http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/02/13/leo-hindery-ceo-pay_n_4784162
.html




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Sunday, February 16, 2014 7:29 AM

6IXSTRINGJACK


I agree something needs to be done.

I've said before that even though I make $3/hr more at minimum wage today than I did beck in 1996, I can only buy around 2 gallons of gas with it while that $5/hr nearly 20 years ago got me around 5 gallons of gas. (That alone has had a drastic and direct impact, of course, on the price of every single good and service we pay for).

Simply raising the minimum wage won't make things any better for anyone if the crooks and criminals aren't driven out of the large companies and the government first. If you raise the minimum wage now, without taking care of the symptoms of the problem, the CEO's will simply make more a year or two from now, and business will continue on as usual in the government.

Worse yet, the people REALLY struggling at the bottom of the heap are going to have it harder than ever. First off, the price of everything will spike accordingly when businesses have to pay their employees more, essentially nullifying the increase. If the increase is large enough, people who are getting benefits such as food stamps or energy assistance will lose some of those benefits and could possibly be forced out of them altogether, since the only increases to the amount you can make every year historically have been 4% inflation increases to the Federal Poverty Level. This is also compounded by the fact that the benefits will pay for less food and energy when prices go up. Large companies will cut hours and jobs in an effort to break even and small struggling businesses like my parents' will close their doors for good.


I'm all about getting to the bottom of this and figuring out a way for life to be better for everyone, but everyone should be VERY wary of a federal minimum wage increase if there is no reasonable and simple explanation as to where all of that extra money is supposed to come from.




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