A cap on executive compensation for corporations

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Train

Lifer
Jun 22, 2000
13,592
87
91
www.bing.com
Originally posted by: eskimospy
I'm arguing that CEO pay is untethered from wealth generation, and it is.
In a few examples, sure. But I could aslo dig up examples where a shitty company got an awesome CEO, and the worth of the company was multiplied 1000x in a few short years.

In those cases the CEO was drastically undercompensated. But you dont see the shareholders complaining then. Or congress stepping and making things
"fair" for all parties.

 

MovingTarget

Diamond Member
Jun 22, 2003
9,002
115
106
Originally posted by: BoberFett
Why don't people make the same fuss about actors and athletes pay?

Do most people think that they are WAAAAAY overpaid for what they do sometimes? Yes.

That being said, this comparison to CEOs is not valid. Actors/atheletes are not critical to how our economy functions as a whole. They do not have the power, influence, etc. that the corporate guys do. It affects the rest of us much more...
 

Moonbeam

Elite Member
Nov 24, 1999
74,869
6,783
126
Originally posted by: AreaCode707
Originally posted by: SamurAchzar
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
Originally posted by: SamurAchzar
Eh, OK, so you capped the managers salaries. What would happen?

1. Managers becoming consultants - still doing the managerial job, but from their own company, invoicing the public company. Obviously, their company is private and only employees them, so there can't be any cap there;

2. More good managers will go to international companies;

3. American companies will have an incentive to locate their headquarter somewhere else, as this is a managerial decision ultimately. In the age of globalization, the prospect of moving your headquarters to Asia or somewhere else is appealing enough as it is;

4. More money will go to the tycoons who have a large share of these companies instead of going to the hired managers.

So basically that's absurd: you won't fix anything, you'll hurt the shareholders and the only guys you're going to get are middle-top management anyway.
Leave it to the shareholders to decide. If they think such a cap is right, let them install it, but forcing it across the board by legalization? That would never work, and it's naive to think it would.

Yup, it would be like taking money our of medicine. The only people who would become doctors are people who want to cure the sick. It would be a fucking disaster. The beautiful thing about being an idiot is that you never see how stupid you are.

Thanks bozo, for letting us know what is the mindset among your homeless shelter.

If you didn't lurk before you joined you may not realize that Moonbeam's mystic sayings are his way of challenging people's assumptions, enticing them to think, and commenting on life from a different perspective - all of which result from a fairly brilliant mind. Also, insulting him won't necessarily win you points with most of the other posters who, while not always agreeing with him, value his contribution to the character and insightfulness of the forums.

You are most kind and have charity of spirit. May your dreams come true even unto the highest.
 

gingermeggs

Golden Member
Dec 22, 2008
1,157
0
71
yllus
-I never imagined you thought that no problem existed, you know the symptoms of the problem- what I was telling you about was the cause.....I'll save the sarcasm for 2010.

And the problems about understanding capitalism are simple- there is no capitalist manifesto!

but the communist one is quite simple and here it is for those whom care to read it-
maybe its like a jew thats reads the kuran for you?

http://www.anu.edu.au/polsci/m...cs/manifesto.html#c1r3


After you read it- if you read it- you will understand a real marxist communism has never ever been used anywhere in the world......ol'Yosip come and snatched it as the baby was being delivered, and thats why it can never be achieved thru violent means(get it in your head red under the bed!). It will eventually evolve, once the word equality is comprehended in its entirety.

Maybe when a Hispanic woman is the president elect??? Maybe when all creeds have lost their generic???
 

BigDH01

Golden Member
Jul 8, 2005
1,631
88
91
Originally posted by: Train

Capitalism:
An economic and political system characterized by a free market for goods and services and private control of production and consumption.

This has nothing to do with the creation of currency. The barter system IS capitalism. Throwing currency into the mix is just adding another thing to barter.

Sigh, do you always form your world-view based on terms you read in a dictionary?

Yes, elements of Capitalism have always existed in humanity. Elements. Just like elements of Socialism have have existed. Elements. Neither Capitalism nor Socialism can be simply defined as private or public ownership. Until you actually investigate Capital and Capitalist modes of production and understand why this is impossible without some measure of capital, you can understand why Capitalism is impossible before the invention of currency (be it commodity, fiat, or intermediate). Hence, Capitalism is impossible before the invention of currency, or while humans operated in a natural economy.


Originally posted by: Train

Thats the most insane thing I have ever heard. Do you see any socialism in black markets? How about unregulated markets like virtual goods? Do you see any of those people getting together to tax themselves for the purpose of redistribution? Get a frikin clue. Anarchy, (not that I'm defending it) is capitalism. Its the only economic system that does not require external forces (i.e. a govt) to support. Which is why its the NATURAL economy.

I don't delve into black markets enough to describe them. I don't because I operate in a mixed economy which provides me with the goods I need without resorting to a black market (and I'm drug free).

History, of course, disagrees with you. Particularly the trade leagues of cities in medieval Europe most closely resembles the type of Capitalism you describe. Little intervention and free markets. These organizations LOST. In evolutionary terms, they were selected for annihilation at the hands of the more powerful Westphalian nation-state. The nation-state offered those things required for modern Capitalism to flourish. Learn your history. Evolution and natural selection is the pinnacle of naturalism in my opinion.

Originally posted by: Train
False false false and more false, Capitalism (like I just stated above) is the only system that DOESN'T require support. It doesnt need banks, or governments, or some mythical protection an individual can not provide for himself. If I grow a tomato, and sell it to whichever neighbor is willing to give me the most wheat for it.... Guess what? Thats capitalism, I ownded the production (my damn self), and I used nothing but supply (how many I(or others) produced) and demand (what the neighbor was willing to pay/trade for it) to determine the price.

This is correct in a sense. However, this style of Laissez-faire Capitalism lost to more mixed economies. In this sense, it was a failure. The mixed economy actually provided lower trade barriers and stronger property rights. Mixed economy Capitalism proved to be the better selection, the one that arises naturally. The city states and trade leagues of Europe weren't hit by asteroids, they were overtaken in wealth and power by the mixed economies of France and England. And it was these modern states that really saw the growth of modern Capitalism starting with Mercantilism.

Originally posted by: Train
If it even tries to say Capitalism was "formed" then its entire premise is false, and should probably be classified as propaganda.

I can see you don't read much.



Which is capitalism. The only economy that requires no external forces. /list

Although history has proven this false. And if we're going to use simplistic definitions:

"German economists have invented the term Naturalwirtschaft, natural economy, to describe the period prior to the invention of money. (...) The writers who describe this period as one of natural economy obviously do not intend the term to be understood in any absolute sense. They are well aware that ever since its invention, money has been in continuous use among all the civilised people of the West, and that the Roman Empire handed it on without interruption to its succession states. Thus when the early Middle Ages are described as a period of natural economy, all that is meant is that the part played by money was then so small as to be almost negligible. Undoubtedly there is a good deal of truth in this contention; but at the same time we must be on our guard against exaggeration" (Henri Pirenne, Economic and social history of medieval Europe. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1936, p. 103-104).

You assume Capitalism exists in a vacuum. If Capitalism is the "natural economy," why did it always so quickly devolve into empire nearly everywhere? Nations where the King was a God and every item belonged to this person. Why did the barter economy in Europe devolve into Feudalism? Early markets and private ownership goes nowhere without a strong state to enforce and legalize these rights. Modern Capitalism only really "takes off" after the Peace of Westphalia.

How do you distinguish "new" weatlh from "old"?

Wealth today is different than the wealth I had yesterday. It has different value.

And if new weatlth going to one person is bad (as you are implying) how exactly was the other person "wronged"? If my neigbor wins the lottery... am I now somehow fucked by this new and vast disparity? Not unleas I'm a jealous SOB, which is the main emothion socialists play to. Drop jealousy, and it doesnt make a difference.

Growth of wealth usually implies inflation. If the pie grew at 3% (and inflation was around the same mark) and 90% of people only saw a 1% increase in wealth, then 90% of people are now poorer.

I'm not jealous of things people own, in fact that's rather superfluous to me. What you and other pure market Capitalists seem to forget is that money buys more than commodities. It buys power. It buys freedom. It buys influence. Why do you think those bartering economies transform into Feudalism and Empire? The accumulation of wealth in few hands inevitably leads to those hands wanting to rule. It is supposed to be the state that protects this from happening today.

If person A is hard working, and person B does enough to get by... guess who will have more wealth at the end of the year? Now they both invest what little they have left over, and repeat to next year. Person A produced more, and also invested more.. Person B invested a little, if any, and still did enough to get by... Person A is of course going to gain faster than person B. This is not a crime, there is no conspiracy here to impoverish person B, person B is just doing it thier way.

So everyone who is wealthy is hard working and everyone who is poor just does enough to get by?

I suggest your start reading into class mobility. You can simply begin here before you start diving into academia.

I do not have a problem with your example, nor would I consider it a crime. Wealth inequality does not bother me. Massive wealth inequality bothers me. This is what inevitably leads to aristocracy. This is what leads to Feudalism. Money does not simply buy TVs, yachts, and vacations. It buys power.

puhlease. You dont even understand the simplest principles of your own examples. Knowledge != intelligence. You can go memorize all the books you want, but if you dont understand the basics.. your like an idiot savant, just reguritating what someone else wrote.

Spoken like someone who doesn't have the knowledge of Capitalism or the history of the state and Capitalism to make a real argument. You must be right because you understand the "principles," correct? Actually, I'm not sure of any academic that shares my exact viewpoints. I'm correcting your account of history, namely the history of Capitalism. I'm basing my knowledge from the readings of people who actually defined (and refined) the word.

Wealth is not static.
Capitalism is a natural system.

These are simple facts that cant be denied. I've seen people successfully argue socialism while at the same time accepting these facts, and I can at least respect that. But when the people like the half informed liberals who post here try to make sense, they are doing soclialism a disservice.

You shouldnt try to bend facts to support your ideology. you should bend your ideology to support the facts.

Wealth is not static, but wealth can still be concentrated in a non-static environment. This is not difficult to comprehend. You can start with some simple stuff here. I expect you won't read it but at least I can try to enlighten you.

Capitalism is a natural system.

What does that mean exactly? It is an economic construct invented by mankind.
 

razor2025

Diamond Member
May 24, 2002
3,010
0
71
Originally posted by: Train
Originally posted by: eskimospy
I'm arguing that CEO pay is untethered from wealth generation, and it is.
In a few examples, sure. But I could aslo dig up examples where a shitty company got an awesome CEO, and the worth of the company was multiplied 1000x in a few short years.

In those cases the CEO was drastically undercompensated. But you dont see the shareholders complaining then. Or congress stepping and making things
"fair" for all parties.

I'd like to see some examples of that. We can give you countless examples of overly compensated useless CEO, but I really want to see CEOs that have been under-compensated, as you describe. Keep in mind that, CEOs do not stick with one company for rest of their career. Think about that when you're looking for these "undercompensated and awesome" CEO.

I think this thread has really been derailed to "Socialism vs Capitalism" debate instead of the CEO compensation cap. Personally, I'd like to see CEO salary (cash) to be capped at most 50x the amount of average employee. That would still give CEOs lower 7-digit figures, so they can live comfortably. I'd also like to see vested shares / options be dated longer. Tie their options for at least 5-years just so they can't cash out with idiotic short-term strategy that has been causing the disservice to shareholders and public. The idea is to create more transparency and de-incentivetize the "quick buck" mindset of current executives.

Again, I'm really looking forward to having more of THIS kind of executive.
http://www.gadling.com/2008/12...eats-at-the-cafeteria/

It's a great example of moderated compensation, and hint of personal ethics. Minds like yours should take in some of these wise lessons.
 

Moonbeam

Elite Member
Nov 24, 1999
74,869
6,783
126
Originally posted by: Train
Originally posted by: eskimospy
I'm arguing that CEO pay is untethered from wealth generation, and it is.
In a few examples, sure. But I could aslo dig up examples where a shitty company got an awesome CEO, and the worth of the company was multiplied 1000x in a few short years.

In those cases the CEO was drastically undercompensated. But you dont see the shareholders complaining then. Or congress stepping and making things
"fair" for all parties.

Have you ever noticed that when you garden and throw plants and weeds in a can that some snails manage to crawl to the top of the can and get out?

Capitalism depends on competition and competition is hate. Capitalism fortifies and rewards our worst instincts. It is based on a disease, self hate and the joy self haters feel in beating others. The psychopath CEO doesn't play for money, he plays to be the best paid in comparison to others. It is being better at the meaningless that rings his bells. He is worshiped by other self haters as the best they also hope to be. Millions of sick have as their aim the goal of being sicker.

There are a million paths in life and they all lead nowhere. Chose a path that leads to life, a path with heart, those of you still alive enough to have ears. Wasn't it a wise man like Bertram Russel who said at the end of his life that he wished he had loved more?
 

gingermeggs

Golden Member
Dec 22, 2008
1,157
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71
Originally posted by: Moonbeam


Wasn't it a wise man like Bertram Russel who said at the end of his life that he wished he had loved more?

yesss, as the same as citizen canes "rosebud"
 

yllus

Elite Member & Lifer
Aug 20, 2000
20,577
432
126
Originally posted by: gingermeggs
yllus
-I never imagined you thought that no problem existed, you know the symptoms of the problem- what I was telling you about was the cause.....I'll save the sarcasm for 2010.

And the problems about understanding capitalism are simple- there is no capitalist manifesto!

but the communist one is quite simple and here it is for those whom care to read it-
maybe its like a jew thats reads the kuran for you?

http://www.anu.edu.au/polsci/m...cs/manifesto.html#c1r3


After you read it- if you read it- you will understand a real marxist communism has never ever been used anywhere in the world......ol'Yosip come and snatched it as the baby was being delivered, and thats why it can never be achieved thru violent means(get it in your head red under the bed!). It will eventually evolve, once the word equality is comprehended in its entirety.

Maybe when a Hispanic woman is the president elect??? Maybe when all creeds have lost their generic???

How is babby formed?
 

gingermeggs

Golden Member
Dec 22, 2008
1,157
0
71
Originally posted by: razor2025
Originally posted by: Train
Originally posted by: eskimospy
I'm arguing that CEO pay is untethered from wealth generation, and it is.
In a few examples, sure. But I could aslo dig up examples where a shitty company got an awesome CEO, and the worth of the company was multiplied 1000x in a few short years.

In those cases the CEO was drastically undercompensated. But you dont see the shareholders complaining then. Or congress stepping and making things
"fair" for all parties.

I'd like to see some examples of that. We can give you countless examples of overly compensated useless CEO, but I really want to see CEOs that have been under-compensated, as you describe. Keep in mind that, CEOs do not stick with one company for rest of their career. Think about that when you're looking for these "undercompensated and awesome" CEO.

I think this thread has really been derailed to "Socialism vs Capitalism" debate instead of the CEO compensation cap. Personally, I'd like to see CEO salary (cash) to be capped at most 50x the amount of average employee. That would still give CEOs lower 7-digit figures, so they can live comfortably. I'd also like to see vested shares / options be dated longer. Tie their options for at least 5-years just so they can't cash out with idiotic short-term strategy that has been causing the disservice to shareholders and public. The idea is to create more transparency and de-incentivetize the "quick buck" mindset of current executives.

Again, I'm really looking forward to having more of THIS kind of executive.
http://www.gadling.com/2008/12...eats-at-the-cafeteria/

It's a great example of moderated compensation, and hint of personal ethics. Minds like yours should take in some of these wise lessons.

Yes the japs are nationalist socialists, even that works better then current US Capitalist system- Hell they out sold you in your own country in the auto industry, as proof!
Hell i'd take a lexus over a Chrysler made benz anyday. But i ride a pushbike!

The US of A is on the right track.... its just got to use the print, not the negative; as the current system stands.
 

razor2025

Diamond Member
May 24, 2002
3,010
0
71
Originally posted by: gingermeggs


Yes the japs are nationalist socialists, even that works better then current US Capitalist system- Hell they out sold you in your own country in the auto industry, as proof!
Hell i'd take a lexus over a Chrysler made benz anyday. But i ride a pushbike!

The US of A is on the right track.... its just got to use the print, not the negative; as the current system stands.

I'm just going to assume that you're mindlessly troll/ranting.
 

MovingTarget

Diamond Member
Jun 22, 2003
9,002
115
106
Originally posted by: gingermeggs
Originally posted by: MovingTarget
Originally posted by: gingermeggs
Communism is a cap! it's putting the genie back in it's bottle.

What do you mean by communism? How so? :confused:

read the manifesto.
http://www.anu.edu.au/polsci/m...cs/manifesto.html#c1r3

I'm trying to ascertain whether you are making the direct link between communism and what the OP is discussing. How does it apply? I ask this only because many people make the mistake of calling policies that don't fall under strick laissez-faire capitalism, communist, which is incorrect.
 

NoShangriLa

Golden Member
Sep 3, 2006
1,652
0
0
Originally posted by: badnewcastle
I don't like anything based on the workers salaries as they vary by too many factors... industry, location, time put in, etc...

I believe that performance based pay for workers/management every level is fair. What's not fair is that nobody actually stands by the performance based pay. We have workers sitting by working with no sense of urgency because they are protected by a union and on the other side we have CEO and other officers being paid insane bonuses.

If a worker isn't performing they should loose pay.

If a CEO's company fails then they shouldn't get anything even have stock taken away... in my mind.
That sound like a noble idea, but how are you going to police that... Sweat shops?

 

Moonbeam

Elite Member
Nov 24, 1999
74,869
6,783
126
Originally posted by: NoShangriLa
Originally posted by: badnewcastle
I don't like anything based on the workers salaries as they vary by too many factors... industry, location, time put in, etc...

I believe that performance based pay for workers/management every level is fair. What's not fair is that nobody actually stands by the performance based pay. We have workers sitting by working with no sense of urgency because they are protected by a union and on the other side we have CEO and other officers being paid insane bonuses.

If a worker isn't performing they should loose pay.

If a CEO's company fails then they shouldn't get anything even have stock taken away... in my mind.
That sound like a noble idea, but how are you going to police that... Sweat shops?

There is, of course, only one way to police anything and it is when the police are your own developed and mature conscience, a conscience untainted by ego. Every real person, every person who has retrieved contact with his true self knows there is no joy, no reward, no pleasure greater than one's own virtue, that the true soul of man finds joy only in surrender, the doing unto others as true love provides for the self. Real justice is a product of being real. Laws and regulations only imitate it. We imitate as best we can, us ignorant fools caught up in our egos. I can judge between Joe and Bob if Joe and Bob are equally unrelated to me, but I can't judge between them if Joe is my brother or I am Bob except of course, if I have transcended being Bob.
 

gingermeggs

Golden Member
Dec 22, 2008
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Originally posted by: MovingTarget


I'm trying to ascertain whether you are making the direct link between communism and what the OP is discussing. How does it apply? I ask this only because many people make the mistake of calling policies that don't fall under strick laissez-faire capitalism, communist, which is incorrect.

yes it is a direct link as communism definitely puts "A cap on executive compensation for corporations"

It removes the monetary motive from CEO, which is the Op's bitch(or maybe he was trolling?)

And the republican party is good at living up to this the opening part of the manifesto- even though the dems are centralist at the moment, still their far from being leftist.

here is that opening part below, which is kind of a statement of fact in a question;


Where is the party in opposition that has not been decried as communistic by its opponents in power? Where is the opposition that has not hurled back the branding reproach of communism, against the more advanced opposition parties, as well as against its reactionary adversaries?

 

theeedude

Lifer
Feb 5, 2006
35,787
6,197
126
We did not have this problem until we made taxation less progressive under Reagan. This of course encourages more payouts on top, since they are taxed less than before. Before these huge salaries didn't make much sense, because most of it went to government anyways due to high top income tax rate.
 

gingermeggs

Golden Member
Dec 22, 2008
1,157
0
71
lets name the player here-


Where is the party in opposition*dems* that has not been decried as communistic by its opponents in power*pubs*?
Where is the opposition that has not hurled back the branding reproach of communism*pubs*, against the more advanced opposition parties*dems*, as well as against its reactionary adversaries*pubs, in house factions*?

 

MovingTarget

Diamond Member
Jun 22, 2003
9,002
115
106
Originally posted by: gingermeggs
Originally posted by: MovingTarget


I'm trying to ascertain whether you are making the direct link between communism and what the OP is discussing. How does it apply? I ask this only because many people make the mistake of calling policies that don't fall under strick laissez-faire capitalism, communist, which is incorrect.

yes it is a direct link as communism definitely puts "A cap on executive compensation for corporations"

It removes the monetary motive from CEO, which is the Op's bitch(or maybe he was trolling?)

And the republican party is good at living up to this the opening part of the manifesto- even though the dems are centralist at the moment, still their far from being leftist.

here is that opening part below, which is kind of a statement of fact in a question;


Where is the party in opposition that has not been decried as communistic by its opponents in power? Where is the opposition that has not hurled back the branding reproach of communism, against the more advanced opposition parties, as well as against its reactionary adversaries?

Communism will do that, but that doesn't necessarily imply that such a policy is necessarily communist. Besides, the OP proposes a cap for ceo pay that is not absolute. It does not remove the monetary incentive for the CEO. Every CEO wants to increase his/her pay. With this policy in place, it will introduce an incentive to increase the workers' pay in addition so that he can fulfill his own personal ambition of more pay. If the company can't afford to do so, then said CEO has the incentive to do a better job so that the company can do just that. It only serves to make pay more accountable to productivity/profitability.

404 Communism not found.
 

MovingTarget

Diamond Member
Jun 22, 2003
9,002
115
106
Originally posted by: gingermeggs
lets name the player here-


Where is the party in opposition*dems* that has not been decried as communistic by its opponents in power*pubs*?
Where is the opposition that has not hurled back the branding reproach of communism*pubs*, against the more advanced opposition parties*dems*, as well as against its reactionary adversaries*pubs, in house factions*?

Calling an apple an orange does not make it so. The Republicans calling the Democrats *communist* is nothing more than FUD for the most part due to residual feelings from the cold war. The Dems' policies can be slightly more beneficial to the Communist cause, but that doesn't amount to much. Just ask the actual communists and socialists here in the US. They do exist.
 

jackace

Golden Member
Oct 6, 2004
1,307
0
0
Originally posted by: BigDH01
Originally posted by: LegendKiller
The ideas in this thread are laughable. Spidey, are you really that dense?

I say, don't cap it. Tax the flying fuck out of it. 80% tax rate for anything over 10MM of executive compensation.

That, or have a minimum of 10-year vesting periods.

Pretty much this. The concern is the extreme concentration of wealth. According to the academic papers I've read comparing the United States to the rest of the world, the best way to prevent the concentration of wealth is to impose very high tax rates on the extreme earners. At one time, the United States had much higher taxes for the highest tax brackets. In 1956, any income earned over 200k (or about 1.56M in 2008 dollars) was taxed at 91%.

This is how you fix it, not by setting a hard limit. I also would not mind seeing some form of escrow or something for bonuses so we can see 5-10 years later if the executive was actually helping the company or if he/she was just cooking the books or crippling it for short-term gains.
 

Specop 007

Diamond Member
Jan 31, 2005
9,454
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Originally posted by: AreaCode707
Originally posted by: Mxylplyx
Anyone think this would be tenable? I think even the most ardent capitalists, like myself, have started taking a hard look at the obscene compensation these execs over failing companies have received, and it frankly pisses me off. What would everyone think of some kind of formula for maximum executive compensation that takes into effect things like average employee compensation, company profitability over so many past years, and company size? It's obvious that these executive teams sitting at the top of these massive companies think of themselves first, and then the company. Hell, that is just human nature. It would be nice if one of the main avenues the executives could use to raise their own salary cap would be to raise the average salary of their employee base. The arguments of this being anti-capitalist no longer have any weight to me. We have seen the results of unbridled capitalism and greed, and it aint so pretty itself.

The issue would be that the most qualified executives would then leave the companies that cap the salaries and instead go to companies that choose not to cap the salaries, leaving capped companies at a disadvantage.

Or are you suggesting this be done via legislation so it applies equally to all companies? In that case qualified executives are more likely to go into consulting and speaking positions and make several times the money they would make as an exec, leaving the companies with less-competent leadership.

In theory I'd be all for letting the engineers and non-MBA project managers of the world run the companies. :D However, I do believe companies should have the ability to make the judgments they want on how they pay any of their employees within the bounds of existing law - I would just require that they do it in real money (no paying bonuses unless your company is in the black, etc.)

Now if you want to talk about changing investment banking and requiring THEM to use real money, I'm all over it!

What disadvatnage??

The prevailing believe is that a company simply must offer top dollar to get the best, and that the best is some ultra exclusive limited pool of candidates. Thats simply not true. In fact I would venture to say you could find just as knowledgable candidates at 5 million a year as you could at 500 million a year. The difference really is your candidate pool is vastly larger so it would be more difficult to separate the chaff from the wheat so to speak.

Do I believe in compensation caps? Well.....I hate to say yes because I am a die hard capitalist but....Yes. There should be a cap. In past few years have shown theres very little correlation between the performance of a company and the compensation of the CEO however there is a very clear causation of poor CEO performance and poor company performance.