CEOs Collect Raises, Workers Collect Pink Slips
(Washington - April 19, 2011) - While millions of Americans struggled to get back on their feet after the worst economic downturn in decades, chief executive officers of the nation’s largest companies got average pay of $11.4 million in 2010 - a 25 percent increase in one year according to Executive PayWatch, released today by the AFL-CIO. Richard Trumka, president of the AFL-CIO, said release of the searchable online data bank is part of a broad campaign to strengthen Wall Street reform, close corporate tax loop-holes and ensure that poor and middle class Americans are no longer required to pay for the greed of corporate CEOs.
“Despite the collapse of the financial market at the hands of executives less than three years ago, the disparity between CEO and workers’ pay has continued to grow to levels that are simply stunning,” said Trumka. The AFL-CIO campaign, he said, is making hard information widely available and encourages people to contact lawmakers to defend and strengthen Wall Street reform.
Executive PayWatch’s searchable data bank enables users to get information by state, industry and top-paid CEOs and compare the pay of top CEOs with the median pay of nurses, teachers, firefighters and other workers. For the first time, Facebook users will also have access to the information and to participate in the campaign.
The AFL-CIO CEO pay estimate is based on 299 companies in the S & P 500 Index whose executive compensation data is available for 2010. The 299 CEOs received a combined total of $3.4 billion in 2010, enough compensation to support 103,325 jobs paying median wages. The median wage for all occupations was $33,190 in 2009, according to the latest available data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
“For the first time, we have hope that things can change,” Trumka said, noting that the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act passed last year gives shareholders tools to help rein in CEO pay. The new law requires public companies to begin disclosing the ratio of CEO pay to median worker pay. “The law,” he said, “Will help investors and the public learn which companies provide fair wages and good jobs to their employees, compared with those that have Outrageous CEO-to-worker pay dispaities.”
Pointing to attacks by some large banks and Wall Street lobbyists on the Dodd-Frank Act ,Trumka said the AFL-CIO campaign will work hard to defend historic reform. Their brazen attempts to undermine reform surprise and offend me and I think they will surprise and offend most Americans. Apparently Wall Street doesn’t want people to know that while working Americans paid for the economic crisis with their jobs, their homes and their retirement savings, these Teflon CEOs escaped unscathed,” he said. The Dodd-Frank Act also provides shareholders with ‘say-on-pay’ advisory votes on executive compensation. This year, Executive PayWatch highlights case studies at Occidental Petroleum, Reynolds American, Hewlett-Packard, Pulte Group, Rite Aid, and Aberombie & Fitch where there are red flags for investors to watch for when voting on these companies’ executive pay practices.
The American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO)
is a voluntary federation of 56 national and international labor unions.
The AFL-CIO union movement represents 10.5 million members,
including 2 million members in Working America, its new community affiliate.
We are teachers and truck drivers, musicians and miners, firefighters and farm workers,
bakers and bottlers, engineers and editors, pilots and public employees,
doctors and nurses, painters and laborers-and more.
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 19, 2011
12:08 PM
CONTACT: AFL-CIO
Josh Goldstein (202) 637-5018
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