For an economist, serving as chair of the Council of Economic
Advisers for the President of the United States may be as good as it
gets. Pols and pundits routinely hang on your every word.
But what can come next, after Council of Economic Advisers
service, can certainly be far more lucrative. An enterprising former
Council chair can count on oodles of invitations to serve on corporate
boards of directors, the panels that determine, among other things, how
much CEOs take home.
Michael Jay Boskin served as a George H.W. Bush Council of
Economic Advisers chair. Laura D’Andrea Tyson chaired the Council for
Bill Clinton. Both have done mighty well as corporate directors — and
mighty well for the CEOs they serve.
Between, 2008 and 2012, Boskin picked up
$4.7 million as a corporate director, not bad for attending a few board
meetings every year. Tyson pocketed just over $3 million. Boskin’s
CEOs averaged $68.2 million in the last of those years, Tyson’s $16.5
million.
Tidbits like these abound in Pay Pals, a fascinating new interactive online resource from the Huffington Post and the Center for Economic Policy and Research. Pay Pals
lets Web surfers discover just how much the directors of America’s top
100 corporations are paying themselves and their chiefs.
Corporations, in a sense, are people. These people.
from here
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