Top CEO pay has increased by 54% since 2009

B00Mer

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Top CEO pay has increased by 54% since 2009



The pay of top CEOs from the 350 largest companies in the US has increased by 54.3 percent from 2009, to an average of $16.3 million per year – six times greater than that of the top 0.1 percent of wage earners, according to new study.

According to the study by the progressive think tank Economic Policy Institute, $53,200 was the average annual salary of the worker in 2009 and it has remained stagnant at this number to this day.

“CEO compensation in 2013 (the latest year for data on top wage earners) was 5.84 times greater than wages of the top 0.1 percent of wage earners, a ratio 2.66 points higher than the 3.18 ratio that prevailed over the 1947–1979 period,” said the institute’s article published alongside the study.



The study was criticized for conspicuously excluding average CEOs from the data set – since only the CEOs of the 350 largest companies are included in the data set, it is essentially only examining the very highest paid CEOs in the country, while ignoring the rest who would paint a fuller picture.

“We can get a more accurate and complete picture of CEO compensation in the US by looking at wage data released recently by the Bureau of Labor Statistics,” American Enterprise Institute scholar Mark Perry published on AEI’s website. “The BLS reports that the average pay for America’s 246,240 chief executives was only $180,700.”

Lawrence Mishel of the Economic Policy Institute responded to this, arguing that the critique was “clever but misguided” due to Perry was being dishonest with statistics in his own way.

“Amazingly, roughly 16 percent of the CEOs in Perry’s preferred measure are in the public sector. Many others are in the nonprofit sector, including CEOs of religious organizations, advocacy groups, and union.” He continues, “The reason to focus on the CEO pay of the largest firms is that they employ a large number of workers, are the leaders of the business community, and set the standards for pay in the executive pay market and probably in the nonprofit sector as well (e.g., hospitals, universities).”

Mishel doesn’t specify what just percentage of the CEOs would have been included Perry’s data set if non-profit and public sector employees were excluded.

The pay of a CEO is determined by the company’s board of directors, who are in turn elected by the shareholders – the owners of the company. This means that the CEO pay is kept in check by shareholders naturally wanting profits to go to them, not to the pockets of the manager that they hired.

One of the reasons that CEO pay is increasing because they are paid in the shares of their companies, rather than just receiving salaries. Earlier in the year, stock markets around the world grow broke records, meaning that the compensation correspondingly grew.

A 2005 study showed that shareholders are content to see their CEO’s pay balloon during bull markets, as long as they are sharing in the wealth. Today, the majority of a CEO’s compensation comes in the form of company stock.


The 2010 Dodd-Frank Act was written stipulation requiring companies to provide information on the CEO pay ratio to their investors, who are, in the case of publicly listed companies, the general public. The Securities Exchange Commission has not decided how to implement this yet, so the regulation has never actually taken effect.

source: http://rt.com/usa/269776-top-ceo-pay-increase/
 

grainfedpraiboy

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A reason for rising CEO salaries and higher corporate profits and growing income inequality between the top earners and middle income earners is automation. Robotics and AI advances actually increased profitability of large corporations during the last downturn and amid a flurry of layoffs which was a first and defied economic models.

I suspect as AI and robotics become more mainstream over the next 20 years you'll see a growing income split and real wage growth for those still working will remain stagnant.
 

B00Mer

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A reason for rising CEO salaries and higher corporate profits and growing income inequality between the top earners and middle income earners is automation. Robotics and AI advances actually increased profitability of large corporations during the last downturn and amid a flurry of layoffs which was a first and defied economic models.

I suspect as AI and robotics become more mainstream over the next 20 years you'll see a growing income split and real wage growth for those still working will remain stagnant.

...and that technology is coming faster than people think.

The minute people felt they were worth $15/hr for employment that has no secondary education requirement, and any halfwit can do, the push for automation went into high gear.

Most of the time, you get attitude and an incorrect order. Robots don't have those issues.

Cashiers being replaced with self serve at WalMart, Co-Op and soon...

Robot Grocery Store Gives High-Tech Upgrade To Food Shopping



No more long lines at the grocery store - the future of food shopping is getting a high-tech upgrade.

Des Moines, Iowa is planning to build a first-of-a kind robotic grocery store as an experiment to offer food and necessities to locals anytime at their convenience.

A partnership between the nonprofit Eat Greater Des Moines and the business equipment firm Oasis24seven will see an automated, vending machine-style unit come to the area.

“Throughout Des Moines, there are areas of town where access to quality food is limited,” said Aubrey Alvarez, the nonprofit’s executive director. “We would love for a full service grocery store to move into these areas, but until that time the robotic unit will address the gap in the community.”

She added this “project takes a simple and familiar idea, a vending machine, and turns it on its head. Robotic Retail will be accessible to everyone.”

Oasis24seven CEO David Maurer said the robotic system “works on a conveyor belt system, with an extractor that retrieves the product from the racks and places it on the conveyor for delivery to the customer.” This allows for more fragile items like bread and eggs to avoid being damaged.

Similar stores are gear driven with a drop down delivery, he pointed out, which limits the products it can offer.

The stores are roughly 260-square-foot and are equipped with a sizeable front window so users can view the available products. “Our stores can be anywhere from 200 to 800 items, it’s fully refrigerated, the product can be anywhere from one ounce to ten pounds,” said Maurer.

Customers can pick and choose their items via a touchscreen ordering system that lists all the available products.

As for price, Alvarez explains that, as a nonprofit, “our goal is to keep the prices in line with a grocery store. We are sourcing as many items as possible through a local non-profit partner who supplies food to 12 food pantries. This will help us keep prices as low as possible.”

Don’t worry about getting expired food. “Anything on those racks that is out-of-date will automatically be taken off the shelf,” he said.

After going through preliminary planning stages, Alvarez hopes they can start construction in late July and have the store up and running soon after.

Beyond this current project, Maurer sees potential expansion for this type of concept. “Whether it is an apartment complex, parking [facility], military base … you could go down the list of the potential business channels for these automated robotic convenience stores.”

www.youtube.com/watch?v=eyMcfOziPqI

www.youtube.com/watch?v=OrtV94QqjnI

Learn more here Oasis24seven

Watch interview here Employees obsolete at robot grocery store | Latest News Videos | Fox News

- See more at: Robot Grocery Store Gives High-Tech Upgrade To Food Shopping

.......................................

7000 people just lost their jobs...

McDonald's hires 7,000 touch-screen cashiers
 

Ludlow

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yeah what he said.

well why not damnit those folks be workin their nuts off payin for three or four house at a time dangit the stress alone warrants a huge increase in pay. Have a little compassion for those under al that pressure not to mention all the worry that one of their car washers might scratch their Rolls Royce or Mazzaroti. this type of stress can kill a mayn.
 

B00Mer

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They earned all of their money so they deserve to keep it, right?



"Greed, for lack of a better word, is good. Greed is right, greed works. Greed clarifies, cuts through, and captures the essence of the evolutionary spirit. Greed, in all of its forms; greed for life, for money, for love, knowledge has marked the upward surge of mankind." - Wallstreet 1987
 

Tecumsehsbones

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So quit whining T-Bones..

I know you have it in for Police and rich folks.. you hate authority and you envy the rich. Maybe you should get a life.
Like everything else you "know," this is a product of your room-temperature IQ and your terror of pretty much everything.
 

B00Mer

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Like everything else you "know," this is a product of your room-temperature IQ and your terror of pretty much everything.

Not afraid of technology dumb azz.. I think we need more of it..

Maybe it replace will lawyers.. :lol: That's if you're not disbarred for criminal misconduct first.

But as I said yesterday, you're brave behind the PC with your childish name calling and stupid remarks. You need to grow up.
 

Tecumsehsbones

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Not afraid of technology dumb azz.. I think we need more of it..
Yeah, like that cutting-edge CB you have. Err. . . had.

Maybe it replace will lawyers.. :lol:
Nah, we'll just sue the maker of the lawyer-replacing tech.

But as I said yesterday, you're brave behind the PC with your childish name calling and stupid remarks.
Yeah, and like yesterday, you said it from behind a PC, hero.
 

B00Mer

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Yeah, and like yesterday, you said it from behind a PC, hero.

...and I have no anonymity on this forum, most of the posters know my address.

You are the one that never shares your personal details, or posts photos of yourself. Why don't you post some pics of you in the courtroom.. (Fictional Courtroom) :lol:

Post some nice pics of Washinton, DC and some of the monuments??

But you do log in with an IP that can be traced to a Internet Service Provider (ISP) and that can be traced to a physical address.

There is always some digital fingerprint somewhere and a legal means of acquiring that information. ;)

So you're not 100% anonymous I guess.
 

Tecumsehsbones

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...and I have no anonymity on this forum, most of the posters know my address.

You are the one that never shares your personal details, or posts photos of yourself. Why don't you post some pics of you in the courtroom.. (Fictional Courtroom) :lol:

Post some nice pics of Washinton, DC and some of the monuments??

But you do log in with an IP that can be traced to a Internet Service Provider (ISP) and that can be traced to a physical address.

There is always some digital fingerprint somewhere and a legal means of acquiring that information. ;)

So you're not 100% anonymous I guess.
Let's say I did (leaving aside the fact that, like most lawyers, I don't do trial work. The fact that you think they do just proves that your claim to know "lots of lawyers" is a lie).

What're you gonna do with that information?
 

B00Mer

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Let's say I did (leaving aside the fact that, like most lawyers, I don't do trial work. The fact that you think they do just proves that your claim to know "lots of lawyers" is a lie).

What're you gonna do with that information?

Never claimed to know lots of lawyers, T-Bones. I'm not in trouble with the law, being sued or suing anyone.. have no need for a lawyer. Overpriced Hucksters.
 

Tecumsehsbones

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Never claimed to know lots of lawyers, T-Bones. I'm not in trouble with the law, being sued or suing anyone.. have no need for a lawyer. Overpriced Hucksters.
Forgotten making that claim? Oh dear.

It was in one of your rants about how I'm not a lawyer. I'd look it up, but you're not worth the effort.

So, were you to get my information such as name and address, what would you do with it?

In other words, do you have the stones to make your implied threat explicit?

Nah, didn't think so.
 

B00Mer

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Are you a Construction worker?? Here is your pink slip.

This robotic bricklayer can build a house in two days



For all the modern tools and heavy machinery found on construction sites these days, one aspect has remained a decidedly manual labor: bricklaying. Just as they did 6000 years ago when masonry was first developed, today's bricklayers still perform their backbreaking work almost exclusively by hand. But thanks to Australian engineer, Mark Pivac, that could soon change. Pivac has developed what he claims is the world's first fully automated bricklaying robot, dubbed Hadrian (yes, like the wall).

"We're at a technological nexus where a few different technologies have got to the level where it's now possible to do it," Pivac told PerthNow. "And that's what we've done." The system will first determine the location of every brick to be laid based on a 3D CAD design, then individually cuts and lays the bricks in sequence. Hadrian doesn't even need to move during the laying process as its 28-foot long boom manipulator is dextrous enough to both set the brick and slather on mortar as well. It even leaves space for pipes and wiring.

The machine is reportedly capable of setting 1000 bricks an hour -- roughly a home's exterior frame every two days or about 150 homes a year -- 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. Pivac hopes to further develop and then market Hadrian in Western Australia before expanding to the entire country and then the rest of the world.

source: This robotic bricklayer can build a house in two days

......................................

More cost cutting, labor cutting but more efficient and productive..

This is a great invention..
 

Walter

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Good for them. My portfolio has increased by a lot more since then so they are doing a good job.
 

Walter

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Well I find this comment interesting..

"We are so funny. Evolving and putting so much effort in making ourselves useless / uneeded. I Wonder if my kids will even get the chance to have a job" - Nny
Yeah. Where are all the blacksmiths and coopers when you need 'em?
 

taxslave

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Are you a Construction worker?? Here is your pink slip.

This robotic bricklayer can build a house in two days



For all the modern tools and heavy machinery found on construction sites these days, one aspect has remained a decidedly manual labor: bricklaying. Just as they did 6000 years ago when masonry was first developed, today's bricklayers still perform their backbreaking work almost exclusively by hand. But thanks to Australian engineer, Mark Pivac, that could soon change. Pivac has developed what he claims is the world's first fully automated bricklaying robot, dubbed Hadrian (yes, like the wall).

"We're at a technological nexus where a few different technologies have got to the level where it's now possible to do it," Pivac told PerthNow. "And that's what we've done." The system will first determine the location of every brick to be laid based on a 3D CAD design, then individually cuts and lays the bricks in sequence. Hadrian doesn't even need to move during the laying process as its 28-foot long boom manipulator is dextrous enough to both set the brick and slather on mortar as well. It even leaves space for pipes and wiring.

The machine is reportedly capable of setting 1000 bricks an hour -- roughly a home's exterior frame every two days or about 150 homes a year -- 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. Pivac hopes to further develop and then market Hadrian in Western Australia before expanding to the entire country and then the rest of the world.

source: This robotic bricklayer can build a house in two days

......................................

More cost cutting, labor cutting but more efficient and productive..

This is a great invention..

What they forgot to add is that it only lays 1000 bricks an hour IF everything is working right. And experience has shown me that isn't a very high percentage of the time.