Last February, amid public anger over millions in bonuses at bailed-out insurance giant AIG,
our top national political leaders rushed to express their outrage -
and even took some steps to place a lid on over-the-top executive pay.
That lid has now come off.
Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, with his just-released rules and proposals on executive pay, has essentially turned the specific executive pay limits that President Barack Obama
announced and Congress legislated this past winter into mushy
prescriptions that pose no real threat to the windfalls to which CEOs
have so thoroughly become accustomed.
Remember that $500,000 "cap" on executive compensation that the White House
announced back in February? That maximum has now become a minimum.
Under the new Treasury rules, a new federal pay czar will
"automatically approve" any paycheck from a troubled enterprise like
AIG that doesn't top half a million - and even allow with that paycheck
"additional compensation paid in the form of long-term restricted
stock."
None of this backpedaling on executive pay reform should
surprise us. Ever since the early 1980s, the years when pay for power
suits first started pirouetting up, up and away, the pattern has become
depressingly familiar. A CEO walks off with a windfall. A Wall Street
highflyer hits an unimaginably massive jackpot. Editorial writers
tut-tut. News magazines run cover stories about corporate greed.
Lawmakers hold hearings and earnestly insist on "pay for performance."
And nothing changes. The outrages just keep getting more outrageous.
Two
decades ago, a commentator labeled Warner Communications CEO Steve Ross
the "prince of pay." Mr. Ross was averaging, in the 1980s, all of $16
million a year.
In 1993, Walt Disney CEO Michael Eisner took home $203 million. An outraged Business Week called
that sum the most any CEO "has made in a single year - or probably in
an entire career in the history of American business."
Four
years later, Mr. Eisner took home even more. He cashed out a stash of
stock options and cleared $565 million, the "biggest payday for an
executive in history," The Washington Post exclaimed.
These
days, that $565 million payday almost seems ordinary. In 2007, the
financial world's top 50 hedge fund managers averaged $581 million each.
We
need to end, and soon, this endless escalation of what our power suits
get to stuff in their pockets. We simply can't afford to continue down
the economic road we've been traveling.
Outrageously huge
rewards, the economic meltdown of the past year has made perfectly
plain, have no redeeming social value. They serve only to create
incentives for outrageous behavior. We need to start discouraging that
behavior - and we can. The best place to start: the federal tax code.
Right
now, our tax code actually encourages excessive executive pay. The more
companies shell out in executive bonuses and stock awards, for
instance, the more they can deduct off their taxes.
Consider,
for instance, Lockheed Martin, a company that feeds almost exclusively
off government contracts. Lockheed recently announced that its CEO took
home $26.5 million in 2008. Under current law, almost all of that $26.5
million qualifies as a tax deduction for the company.
One member of Congress, Rep. Barbara Lee
from California, is moving to end taxpayer subsidies for excessive
executive pay. Ms. Lee has introduced legislation, the Income Equity
Act, which denies corporations tax deductions on any executive
compensation that runs over $500,000 or 25 times the pay of a company's
lowest-wage worker.
Enacting this legislation, says Ms. Lee,
"would discourage skyrocketing pay at the top and encourage companies
to raise the pay of workers at the bottom."
That pay at the
bottom desperately needs raising. Average Americans today, after
adjusting for inflation, are making less in weekly wages than they made
back in the 1970s.
And that's no accident. For three decades
now, America's corporate aristocrats have "performed" - and pocketed
personal fortunes - by attacking the well-being of average Americans.
Over those years, they've downsized workers and outsourced jobs.
They've gutted pensions and benefits. They've hollowed out our middle
class.
We need to start heading in a different direction. And quick.
Article printed from www.CommonDreams.org