Originally posted by: krunchykrome
Originally posted by: Special K
I won't argue that most of them are worth a high price. There are two things I have issue with:
1. The average CEO pay as a multiple of the typical salary at the company has steadily increased over the years. Does a CEO of 2007 really do 20X the work of a CEO of 1980 to justify the 20X increase in pay? Does a CEO of 2007 do the work of 1000 average workers, but a CEO of 1980 only did the work of 100 workers? It's not the absolute number that concerns me, it's the rate of increase. If we take this CEO pay trend to the extreme, it seems that a single CEO will eventually be paid the sum of all other employees' salaries in the company. Can a CEO really do as much work as every other worker in the company combined?
Has the cost of living remained the same since 1980?
If the raises were due to cost of living increases, then the multiple of CEO's pay vs. the average employee's pay would have remained the same, since both should have received a cost of living increase.
Let me use some example numbers (assume 3% COL raises each year):
1980
Average employee makes $20k/year
CEO makes $200k/year - 10X what the average worker makes
2007
Average employee now makes ~$44.4k/year
CEO makes ~$444.25k - still 10X what the average worker makes
Instead, it is more like:
1980
Average employee makes $20k/year
CEO makes $200k/year - 10X what the average employee makes
2007
Average employee now makes ~$44.4k/year
CEO makes ~$4.4 million/year - this is now 100X what the average employee makes
As you can see, this pay discrepancy did not come about due to cost of living increases. If it did, then the CEO's pay
as a multiple of the average worker's pay would not have increased much, if at all, since both would have received cost of living increases during that time.