Is the compensation of America’s CEOs excessive?

Is the compensation of America’s CEOs excessive?



Are⁣ America’s⁢ CEOs overpaid?

“We’re⁢ fed up with falling‌ behind,” declared Shawn Fain,⁣ the boss of America’s United Auto⁤ Workers (UAW), last month after ​the union ‍began a campaign of intermittent strikes at Ford, General Motors ⁤(GM)⁢ and Stellantis, America’s “big three” carmakers. A month​ in, the two sides are‌ still at loggerheads. Jim Farley, Ford’s⁤ chief executive, has argued that the 36% ‍pay rise⁤ over⁤ four years ⁣demanded by ​the striking workers would⁤ cripple his business. The UAW has countered that the average ⁣pay of the big​ three’s CEOs is 40% higher than it was in 2019, compared⁢ with​ 6% ​for the union’s members, which ⁣is well below inflation. Last‍ year Mr Farley raked in $21m in⁢ pay, Carlos Tavares, his counterpart‍ at⁢ Stellantis, $25m and Mary Barra of GM, $29m. ⁤The average ⁣full-time UAW⁢ member made less than $60,000. (Exor,⁢ the biggest shareholder in Stellantis, part-owns The Economist’s‍ parent⁤ company.)

America’s bosses are ⁢certainly⁤ well compensated.⁤ After languishing in the 2000s, median ⁣pay ⁣for CEOs of big companies in the S&P⁣ 500 index has climbed by 18% over ‍the past decade, ‌adjusting for inflation, twice the rise in the median full-time ⁣wage in ⁣America. The typical S&P ⁣500 ​boss​ earned more than $14m last year, according to figures from MyLogIQ, a‍ data provider.⁢ That is around 250 ⁤times as⁢ much as the​ average ‍worker. It is​ also ⁢more ⁣than bosses‍ earn in Britain (where ​chiefs of⁣ FTSE 100 firms took home just shy​ of⁣ $5m), ⁣let alone ⁣in France and Germany (where CEOs are paid‍ still less). Some ‌American corporate chieftains rake ⁤in many times that. In ​2022 ​Sundar Pichai of Alphabet, a tech⁤ titan, received a $218m stock award,‌ following a similar-sized bounty​ in ⁢2019. In 2021 ‍David Zaslav of Warner Bros Discovery, a media giant, received stock options worth an estimated $203m (subject ​to ⁤hitting certain performance hurdles).

Investors, for their part, do ‌not seem overly bothered.⁢ Last year only 4% of⁤ S&P 500 companies failed to win…

2023-10-17‌ 16:06:45
Post from www.economist.com
⁤ rnrn

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