Their money belongs to them. Not you.UncleMatt wrote:Is that what you say to wealthy people when they want tax cuts that add to our deficit? That the money has run out?
A tax obligation beyond ten percent is theft.
Their money belongs to them. Not you.UncleMatt wrote:Is that what you say to wealthy people when they want tax cuts that add to our deficit? That the money has run out?
rjaypeters wrote:Yeah! Unions, composed of those greedy people! They've managed to raise their wage demands at the same rate as CEOs. Oh, wait, no, they haven't.
http://www.slate.com/id/2290510/pagenum/2
The relevant quote: "If a CEO can make a lot in the short-term, regardless of what happens in the long-term, then he would require superhuman integrity to care sincerely about the long-term."
And we know CEOs have superhuman integrity, right?
Example: I have been made aware of a company which is not doing well and the CEO has received a bonus more than double his annual six-figure salary. This same bonus is almost half the total for the company bonuses (for executives and managers because they haven't gotten raises for three years).
This company is losing money and they're giving bonuses?! And the CEO has the gall to take a bonus more than double his salary?! Clearly, union greed is the problem here. Oh, wait, no, this same company's unions have been making concessions and just got a three percent raise.
The really fun part is the bonuses were awarded because the rank-and-file got a three percent raise and the executives were envious. I bet the other executive's bonuses weren't as nice as 200%, but better than three percent of salary.
Those blasted unions! They should learn from their betters and demand even _more_ money!
Not me. I don't envy the CEO because he is doing something wrong!Diogenes wrote:Why must you play the envy game?
It isn't my business, but I thought I'd share here because it is an example of greed. Greed which should be constrained by a sense of proportion, decency and fear of the board of directors because the CEO and executives are NOT increasing shareholder value.Diogenes wrote:What business is it of yours what money someone else makes as long as they aren't doing anything illegal?
Wrong, completely. I'd rather this company and all the others were well enough run they wouldn't have these problems, but they do.Diogenes wrote:Your attitude reminds me of that old Russian joke about being granted a wish by a Genie. Instead of wishing for a cow of his own, the Russian wished his neighbor's cow would die.
rjaypeters wrote:Not me. I don't envy the CEO because he is doing something wrong!Diogenes wrote:Why must you play the envy game?
Yes, and you would have a vote to affect the outcome.rjaypeters wrote:It isn't my business, but I thought I'd share here because it is an example of greed. Greed which should be constrained by a sense of proportion, decency and fear of the board of directors because the CEO and executives are NOT increasing shareholder value.Diogenes wrote:What business is it of yours what money someone else makes as long as they aren't doing anything illegal?
It would be my business if I was a stockholder, wouldn't it?
rjaypeters wrote: I was being sarcastic about how the unions should demand more money. Since the company is losing money, why is anyone getting more money?! Because they can! Because the executives of this firm granted a pay-raise to employees and then felt envy!! Kill the (not-so) golden goose? You can't, right? The money won't run out, will it?
Wrong, completely. I'd rather this company and all the others were well enough run they wouldn't have these problems, but they do.Diogenes wrote:Your attitude reminds me of that old Russian joke about being granted a wish by a Genie. Instead of wishing for a cow of his own, the Russian wished his neighbor's cow would die.
Unfortunately yes. Shareholders always love it when companies lay off workers. That normally improves the companies fiscal position.rjaypeters wrote:Where is the leadership executives are supposed to supply? Why weren't, aren't all of them reducing their salaries, foregoing bonuses, etc.
Silly question, sorry, so much easier to lay-off substantial percentages of workers, squeeze the same amount of work out of fewer people, and reward the executives for their business acumen. Those actions are something shareholders will like.
The ratio of CEO compensation to average worker compensation has been declining since 2000. It is now less than half of what it was in 2000. Most of that decline happened while ... wait for it ... Bush was in office.rjaypeters wrote:Where is the leadership executives are supposed to supply? Why weren't, aren't all of them reducing their salaries, foregoing bonuses, etc.
Silly question, sorry, so much easier to lay-off substantial percentages of workers, squeeze the same amount of work out of fewer people, and reward the executives for their business acumen. Those actions are something shareholders will like.
No, it's-not-enough and the statistics cited are from a small sample.seedload wrote:So, you may want to claim that it-isnt-enough, but please stop with the it-aint-happening.
Sorry, you are right, it was silly for me to give an example with a sample size of 500 when you had already provided an example with a sample size of 1. My bad.rjaypeters wrote:No, it's-not-enough and the statistics cited are from a small sample.seedload wrote:So, you may want to claim that it-isnt-enough, but please stop with the it-aint-happening.
When I read the page you reference, I read about laws requiring limits on executive pay at companies that received "exceptional assistance" from companies in (under?) the TARP.
I didn't write about laws, I wrote about leadership. Did the executives cited above do so voluntarily?
Also, the example I gave was a non-S&P 500 company. How many are there of those compared to the S&P 500?
Really? Think this through carefully now. You made no points. You asked questions.rjaypeters wrote:Thank you for answering the points of my post.
I don't knowrjaypeters wrote:Did the executives cited above do so voluntarily?
I don't know.rjaypeters wrote:Also, the example I gave was a non-S&P 500 company. How many are there of those compared to the S&P 500?
Code: Select all
Firms Paid Employees
Employer firms 5,885,784 115,074,924
Firms with 10,000 890 30,438,785
employees or more
Look, I didn't realize that you were speaking exclusively about 'leadership'. I probably got confused because you didn't say 'leadership' until your fourth post or so. Maybe it was the topic of the thread that mixed me up as well, I thought that your points on executives not having declining compensation was interesting relative to worker compensation given the thread context, but again, I just didn't realize that 'leadership' was what we were exclusively talking about. My bad.rjaypeters wrote:This is a useful page: Statistics about Business Size (including Small Business) from the U.S. Census Bureau
http://www.census.gov/epcd/www/smallbus.html
I gave an example which I don't even claim to be a sample. The S & P 500 are five hundred firms out of about 5.885 million.Code: Select all
Firms Paid Employees Employer firms 5,885,784 115,074,924 Firms with 10,000 890 30,438,785 employees or more
Is that a representative sample?
Yes, the essence of a conversation is answering the points of the correspondent. I have been writing about leadership from the executives.
I have read of a few examples of executives voluntarily reducing their salaries and bonuses during the recession. They are cited as the exceptions, rather than the rule.