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Executive Pay Skyrockets 23 Percent In 2010, Top 299 CEOs Get $3.4 Billion

Jets

First Posted: 04/19/11 12:42 PM ET Updated: 06/19/11 06:12 AM ET

WASHINGTON -- CEOs at 299 U.S. companies earned a staggering $3.4 billion combined in executive compensation in 2010, a new study by the nation’s largest labor union found.

Nearly 190 of those chief executives got a pay raise compared to their 2009 levels, the AFL-CIO noted in a report presented to reporters on Tuesday. The total amount of compensation represented a 23 percent increase from the prior year. In all, the sum of the salaries earned by those 299 CEOs equalled the combined average earnings of more than 100,000 workers in their respective companies.

The figures, which are part of the union federation’s annual Executive PayWatch -- a searchable database examining publicly available payment information from S&P 500 Companies -- reflect what AFL-CIO president Richard Trumka called a culture of “runaway CEO pay.” The numbers were presented as part of a larger pitch for Congress and the President to clamp down on executive compensation and protect the gains made on this front in the financial regulatory reform bill passed last year.

“The game is pretty rigged when it comes to the directors,” said Trumka. “It is getting a little better because the spotlight that we have been trying to shine on this for 15 years is starting to get a littler brighter now. We are having a moderating effect. But I think if the spotlight were to go away the game would go right back to what it was before."

A request for comment from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, which lobbies on behalf of business interests, was not immediately returned.

Under the financial regulatory reform bill, commonly known as Dodd-Frank, shareholders of publicly traded companies are given a say-on-pay vote on executive compensation. While the votes are not binding, union officials view them as a vehicle for spotlighting -- or at least embarrassing -- executives who earn vastly disproportionate wages compared to the rest of their work force.

Among those CEOs highlighted in the AFL-CIO’s presentation were Viacom CEO Philippe Dauman (who was awarded salary, stock and other benefits totaling $84.5 million during just nine months of 2010), Occidental Petroleum CEO Ray Irani (who was paid more than $76 million in compensation) and Abercrombie and Fitch CEO Michael Jeffries (who earned more than $36 million). According to the AFL-CIO report, the average pay of the 299 CEOs would cover the salaries of more than 700 minimum-wage workers.

“The levels of pay that we are seeing today are simply unacceptable,” said Brandon Rees, Deputy Director of the AFL-CIO's Office of Investment.

Outrage over an imbalance in compensation levels is nothing new for the union federation. The 12 million-member AFL-CIO has been putting out Executive PayWatch studies since 1997. Since then, compensation for CEOs has soared dramatically.

At various points, different remedies to curb rising CEO pay have been proposed, including advocating that companies that receive federal funds should be subject to actual caps on executive salaries. Now, however, proponents of limiting CEO pay have scaled back their ambitions, pushing transparency and the subsequent public shame as key remedies.

“This is a particularly important time for shareholders and anybody who wants to hold CEO’s accountable, because the regulations are being written right now… and [companies] are doing everything they can to try and dilute those regulations," said Trumka. "[Any] spotlight that can be put on them right now and their efforts to try to dilute the law and go back to business as usual for Wall Street is very, very helpful.”

UPDATE: J.P. Fielder, a spokesman for the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, sends over the following reaction to the AFL-CIO's push to tackle CEO pay.

The Chamber feels that corporate executives’ compensation should be based on a balance of individual accomplishment, corporate performance, adherence to risk management, and compliance with laws and regulations, with a focus on shareholder value. The government should not pick winners and losers.
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WASHINGTON -- CEOs at 299 U.S. companies earned a staggering $3.4 billion combined in executive compensation in 2010, a new study by the nation’s largest labor union found. Nearly 190 of those ch...
WASHINGTON -- CEOs at 299 U.S. companies earned a staggering $3.4 billion combined in executive compensation in 2010, a new study by the nation’s largest labor union found. Nearly 190 of those ch...
 
 
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COMMUNITY PUNDITS
Bronxdude 01:44 PM on 04/19/2011
Paul Ryan wants to cut tax revenue by giving Fortune 500 corporations and those earning $250,000 or more $6.5 trillion in tax cuts over ten years. To replace the loss revenue made possible by these cuts, Ryan proposes privatizing Medicare and eliminating Pell Grants, USDA free and reduced fee school lunch programs, WIC, Section 8 rental assistance, and cutting $9.8 billion from Medicaid and CHIP, leaving 32  Read More...
04:30 PM on 05/16/2011
A snapshot of the REALITY of insurance and healthcare costs.

http://www.ahipcoverage.com/2011/05/14/fact-check-health-plans-profits-accounted-for-12-of-1-of-total-health-care-spending-in-2010/

The main driver of cost is NOT health plan profits or admin but the cost shifting of the govt plans to the providers and onto OUR premiums.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Thisboy
01:00 AM on 04/22/2011
The Defenders of Corporate Wealth have no allegiance to America or Americans. We are supposed to ignore the fact that the Wealthy live in a separate world while playing an economic game they never lose at our expense. A game paid for and insured against failure by the majority of Americans who cannot afford to participate. The score is kept on Wall Street and no longer reflects the prosperity of the Nation, but only those from around the globe wealthy enough to play.
Our "friends" on the Right have lied, intimidated,frightened, obscured facts,and rewritten history to assure us that the game of the very rich will benefit all of us . They are traitors paid off by Wall Street pit bosses and special interest Corporations to assure us that the gross concentration of wealth and it's obvious diversion to the top will benefit us all. Their job is to convince a intentionally dumbed down and jaded nation that only those playing the game can save us. Despite the fact that not more than three years ago their warped ideology of "trickle down" had nearly destroyed our economy,personal fortunes,investments and the future of millions of Americans.
America is better and smarter than to fall for this blatant greed and arrogance of the blessed few. We are Nation of endless resources that belong to all Americans . Not just those who have access to those resources and the money to monopolize them..
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kamact
Market Observer
12:56 AM on 04/22/2011
I recommend offshoring these CEO positions to create millions of jobs for working Americans
04:04 PM on 04/21/2011
The rich are a minority that demand they receive special treatment
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Reiner-von-Sinn
Fol de rol de rolly O
07:22 AM on 04/21/2011
Well first of all these guys are hired hands, employees, not entrepreneurs.

Most of 'em got where they are cutting jobs not growing businesses.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MikeyJaii
Socialism.
11:53 PM on 04/20/2011
As they're earning more, a lot more Americans lose their jobs the ones that are kept gets longer hours and still the same pay. Hmm ...?
09:41 PM on 04/20/2011
I'm confused, I thought the teachers were the bad guys.

It is seriously time to grab your pitchfork people.
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Connie Markley Boppre
09:24 PM on 04/20/2011
greedy little pigs
medialv2
Capitalism = liars & thieves
02:34 PM on 04/20/2011
All you people threatening "one day i'm going to get all riled up for revolution !!!" are kidding themselves.

You are still overfed (you don't have to be fat to be overfed) and trained to be complacent.

Capitalists threw Russia into virtual starvation (for the middle aged and seniors) and chaos ensued.

They keep you on a barely affordable diet of soothing carbs and you keep yourself amused on the Internet.

There will be no revolution.
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Reiner-von-Sinn
Fol de rol de rolly O
07:23 AM on 04/21/2011
They'll fire you if you don't come to work.
medialv2
Capitalism = liars & thieves
02:19 PM on 04/20/2011
Everyone should define what truly CAPITALISM's end game is and then read about Socialism.
medialv2
Capitalism = liars & thieves
02:14 PM on 04/20/2011
Tie CEO pay to 20x's the lowest paid person in the organization. Minimum wage will go up really fast.
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chaya
Another proud veteran
01:28 PM on 04/20/2011
If you are such a great executive that you bring in new customers and more sales because of advertising or product innovations, more power to you.

But most of these companies are putting out progressively cheaper, shoddier products. Spray bottles that last a month. Towels that don't dry. Sweaters that aren't warm. Thinner jeans. Plastic bottles with caps that are so small and thin you can't get them back on again. Ice cream scoops made of plastic that is coated with fake metal that flakes off. Progressively smaller sizes of yogurt cups and hundreds of other products.

And all this with the dandy bonus of ever-increasing damage to the environment.
05:27 PM on 04/20/2011
Thes companies are not American , they are multinationals so lets tax them till the cows come home.
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01:20 PM on 04/20/2011
And despite these numbers, governors across the nation are trying to balance state budgets by busting teacher unions.

I say give every corporate employee a standardized test and use the results to determine CEO pay.
10:28 AM on 04/20/2011
The CEO's in the US will let you know that no amount of money is too much, these vastly superior beings are only upset that someone might threaten their boundless wealth. These folks may have, in some instances, actually produced something, but truthfully very few. They are similar in so many ways to Pres. Mubarak. The Egyptians have now found out that the wealth of the Mubarak family to be in excess of $80 billion. The one thing Mubarak could have done is find $2 billion to be acceptable and create jobs and spread the additional money to the people that truly produced items to bring in the cash.


CEOs of the US are just as foolishly blind as Mubarak, maybe a bit of serious, non-violent protesting is what is needed to awaken the upper 2%.. I do not want to see someone like Trump pulling the same crap
05:30 PM on 04/20/2011
Sadly these CEO's want to be seen as victims that need coddling from the government. They hoard money and want us to feel sorry for them, No outrage from the Tea Party. America rejected royalty only to create our own royal class of aristocrats.
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builderman55
Featherless Biped
10:28 AM on 04/20/2011
"The Chamber feels that corporate executives’ compensation should be based on a balance of individual accomplishment, corporate performance, adherence to risk management, and compliance with laws and regulations, with a focus on shareholder value. The government should not pick winners and losers." Well, given that the "marketplace" chose such losers who subsequently crashed the global economy due to their greed, avarice and stupidity, could the government really do much worse?? I would suggest that the government mandate a new standard: JTRSTBATF: Just The Right Size To Be Allowed To Fail. Then we, the taxpayers, won't be FORCED to fork over hundreds of billions of dollars when they get stupid again (which, BTW, they will...)
05:32 PM on 04/20/2011
Since no one has been jailed for the last financial meltdown, they face no risk or penalty to do it again.