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Tuesday, June 21, 2011

How Much Is Enough


Apparently it’s all in how you look at it. According to a Governance Metrics International (GMI) study, on average CEO pay levels jumped 28% in 2010. And it gets worse. At the top, CEOs of “S&P 500” companies saw their income jump 94.2%. CEOs of “S&P Midcap” companies did even better; they got an average 123.5% boost in 2010.

At about the same time the GMI study was released, an article posted on CFO.com whined, “Ghost of Enron Wreaks New Havoc on Exec Pay.”  Written by an “Executive Compensation” Attorney, the piece goes on for several paragraphs about how certain tax dodges that were changed post-Enron are now resulting in those at the top of the pile being forced to pay more taxes. Poor babies!

The growing gap between the rich and the poor in America raises the ethical question, how much is enough? There is not a speck of evidence that these outrageous executive compensation levels create great leaders; quite the contrary in fact. Nearly a decade ago best selling author and business consultant, Jim Collins, addressed that subject in a USA Today OP-ED. His company found, “In a five-year study, after 112 separate analyses looking for a strong link between executive compensation and corporate results, we found no pattern whatsoever. If you have the right people, they will do everything in their power to make the company great.”

Take away? It’s the people, not the paycheck. Should executives be well compensated? Of course. But this out-of-control “Carpet Land” battle to take home the most bucks is insane. In way too many cases it is taking the focus away from leading the company and turning it to leading the pay scale.

A few decades ago CEOs earned about 40 times as much as the lowest paid employee in the company they headed; today 1000 times is not uncommon. So how did executive pay rocket out of control? Greed. Ego driven greed enabled by corporate directors who allowed it to happen; directors too often chosen by the CEO. These CEOs then conned them into hiring Compensation Consultants who –knowing which side their bread is buttered on– make sure they convince these compliant directors that they must boost executive compensation. And so a destructive cycle drives the bucks up, up and away.

Hopefully the stockholders will shake off this compensation culture, boot the consultants and others that drive this destructive practice and reign in executive compensation. After all, a stable society is built on a content middle class, an endangered species these days.

These top-dogs will still be able to afford the luxury goods that are flying off the shelves across America today, while those down the food chain worry about the basics. And maybe if the greedy don’t have quite so much extra cash lying around, they will stop speculating in oil and driving up the price of gasoline. That would be nice and it might just simmer down the growing discontent with life in these United States. How much is enough? Enough is Enough!

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