Job Cutting CEO’s Average 12 Million In Salary (not counting other benefits)

The fifty largest job cutting companies in the United States paid their chief executive officers a total of 598 million dollars.

Read some more –

The nation’s biggest job-cutting companies paid their top executives an average of $12 million last year, according to a report released today.

The 50 U.S. chief executives who laid off the most employees between November 2008 and April 2010 eliminated a total of 531,363 jobs, according to the Institute for Policy Studies, a research group that works for social justice and against wealth concentration.

In “CEO Pay and the Great Recession,” the institute said the $598 million in combined pay for the 50 executives would have paid one month’s worth of average-sized unemployment benefits for each of the laid-off workers.

The top 50 layoff firms reported a 44 percent average profit increase for 2009, the report said.

“These numbers all reflect a broader trend in Great Recession-era Corporate America: the relentless squeezing of worker jobs, pay and benefits to boost corporate earnings and maintain corporate executive paychecks at their recent bloated levels,” the authors wrote.

The complete article is here.

The complete study is found here.

Job killing has been profitable for many years now but the scale of the rewards are almost unimaginable. Reflect that 12 million dollars yearly is a million a month. In a thirty day month, that’s about 33,000 dollars a day or 4,166 dollars and hour or 69.44 a minute.

James Pilant

Corporate social responsibility (via Thinking Beyond Competition)

This is an excellent piece on corporate hypocrisy. I am impressed. This is clever and speaks volumes of the intelligence of the author. I think this article should be on the desk of every business ethics teaching in the U.S. Go give it a read!
Nice Work!

James Pilant

The October 2005 issue of Reason Magazine featured a fascinating debate on the subject of corporate social responsibility between John Mackey (the CEO of Whole Foods), Milton Friedman (the libertarian economist famous for the Free to Choose book and video series he created along with his wife Rose), and T. J. Rodgers, a Silicon Valley entrepreneur. (Here's the Wikipedia entry on corporate social responsibility). Both Mackey and Friedman make good … Read More

via Thinking Beyond Competition