Socialism Or Your Money Back blog recently posted details of
how the bosses in the UK made more than the average worker in a year by 6PM on Tuesday. Canadian CEOs were even luckier. By lunchtime Monday, Canada's
top chief executives had already banked an average worker's annual salary.
To put that another way, in 2014, the country's top-paid
CEOs took home 184 times as much as the average Canadian worker, according to
an annual report on publicly-traded companies released Monday by the Canadian Centre
for Policy Alternatives. According to the report, the average take-home for a
CEO in the country was $8.96 million, accumulated through salaries, stock
options, bonuses, and share grants. Meanwhile, the average worker earned a
total of $48,636, while the average minimum wage worker got $22,010.
"What really struck me more than anything else—given
the fact that the Canadian economy was already quite weak and commodity prices
were already deteriorating in 2014—was the resilience of CEO
compensation," the report's author, research associate Hugh Mackenzie,
told The Star on Monday. "My general suspicion is that all these things
are ways of paying people more without people being able to figure out exactly
how much."
Although executive paychecks dipped slightly in 2014 from
the previous year, the report, Staying Power: CEO Pay in Canada also found that
CEO compensation climbed by 25 percent between 2008 and 2013. Meanwhile, the
average worker's salary increased by just 11 percent.
While the average CEO salary hovered around $9 million, the
highest-paid executives surpassed that by astronomical amounts. Number one on
the list was John Chen of Blackberry, who took home $89.7 million. Chen's base
salary was significantly lower than other executives included in the survey,
but his shares in the company were worth $88 million, making up the vast
majority of his total compensation.
Second place went to Donald Walker, who had a similarly low
base salary—$358,924, slightly higher than Chen's $341,452—but likewise raked
in a chunk of his overall pay from company shares, which made up $11.6 million
of his $24 million take-home. Other rewards filled in the rest.
As Mackenzie explains, bonus-heavy compensation packages are
used to pay CEOs for performances over which, in reality, they have little control.
"Most of the compensation of these executives is not
based on how their companies performed in the real markets that they actually
have some ability to influence," he told the Star. "It’s based on the
performance of the shares of the company in a market in which the executive
can’t control at all.... The criteria that drive the incentive-based
compensation, you would think, ought to be based on how the company does based
on those same comparables but it doesn’t."
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau pledged during his election
campaign to raise taxes on the super-rich in order to lower them for the middle
class and close loopholes that allow CEOs to avoid paying full taxes on their
pay by taking it from stock options, which are taxed lower than salaries. In
fact, Mackenzie says, reforming the tax loophole alone would "expressly
discourage" the deceptive method of equity-based compensation.
These CEOs are rewarded for reducing labor costs,
undermining worker benefits (or outright eliminating them), breaking unions,
compromising safety standards, ignoring poor working conditions, negotiating
labor contracts (if unionized) that strangle the workers through threats of job
loss and other coercion. Their unconscionable punishing acts against their
workers do not keep them awake at night or give them even pause for reflection...not
when they have private jets awaiting them. While it is workers who produce the
products and provide the services that generate wealth, it is the capitalist
class that collects and accumulates that wealth. There is no equality under
capitalism … only tyranny and robbery.
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