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Why High Pay is Bad for Capitalism

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Too often, capitalism's strongest supporters defend high executive pay, especially in the finance sector, in the belief that they are upholding the principles of the free market. This is a grave mistake. The market for pay has been distorted by self-interest, and the capitalist system they hold dear is suffering as a consequence.

Since the 2008 financial crisis, much attention has focussed on how to ensure that large bonuses do not encourage employees to take excessive risks with investors' money. But there is another, more deeply entrenched problem -- one that has passed without serious challenge, but may pose an even greater long-term danger to capitalism. That is the abuse of the term "talent" when describing senior corporate executives or finance sector employees.

These people, we are told, possess such rare commercial talent that they can rightfully lay claim to fabulous wealth. This view persists despite the absence of any reasonable method of measuring individual performance, let alone attributing a company's financial success to it.

The myth of rare talent is propagated and relentlessly championed not just by the high earners themselves, but also by many others who stand to gain from it -- their headhunters, business schools and management consultancies that sell their services to company chiefs, and the senior employees of institutional shareholders who benefit financially from the exact same myth.

Those who promote the "talent" argument repeatedly evoke an erroneous comparison with sports stars. Many people may object to the high earnings of the latter on moral grounds, but it is certainly rational to pay for sporting prowess that is highly transparent, and close to irreplaceable. Only a handful among the billions on the planet could emulate the skills and impact of Alex Rodriguez or Lionel Messi.

By contrast, the success of a company may have little or nothing to do with the alleged abilities of its most prominent employees. Benign economic conditions, a powerful and long-established brand, a lack of industry competition, smart middle managers, or just plain luck, to name but a few factors, may have had a greater influence on corporate success. It is especially difficult to pinpoint executive influence in firms that employ tens of thousands of staff worldwide.

Even if the impact of senior corporate executives was indeed measurable, what precisely is it that they do that a significant number of other diplomatic, articulate, persuasive, insightful, credible, energetic people with related experience couldn't also do, given the right mentoring? Not everyone has what it takes, of course, but surely enough do to create sufficient competition for those top jobs. Or are we really to believe that the only people with commercial talent are the tall, white, middle-aged men who dominate Western boardrooms?

Similarly, the supposed rare talents of super-rich employee bankers have not been adequately explained. An ability to sell, while reasonably uncommon, is hardly limited to a tiny proportion, especially as it is a skill that can be transferred across sectors, once supplemented with some product training. Some bankers have undoubtedly mastered complex financial products. But aren't there sufficient numbers of university graduates in esoteric subjects to suggest that many more people are capable of mastering complexity?

The truth is that the "talent" referred to in the workplace does not generally describe a rare ability, as it does in sport. Rather, it is duplicitously deployed to defend the positions and wealth of high-fliers in a knowledge-based economy, where the value of individual contribution is so subjective. In doing so, it serves to sanction the unwarranted plunder of shareholder funds.

In the modern world, those shareholder funds mostly belong to the population at large, through their pensions and savings. Opinion polls reveal that while American people have no problem with entrepreneurs becoming extremely wealthy, they smell a giant rat in the form of high corporate pay. The growing realisation that a small club of insiders has stolen the system from them has created a widespread popular resentment, making democratic governments more prone to heavy-handed measures that stunt growth. The brazen appropriation of wealth also discredits the entire system of free enterprise.

There are other damaging consequences of the talent myth. Excessive pay at the top of our public companies distorts the incentives for smart, hardworking people away from entrepreneurship, with all the creative energy and innovation it unleashes, and towards a life of office politics and ladder-climbing, working in jobs that many others could also do.

Of course, not everyone weighs up whether to work in a large company or go it alone. It would be hard to imagine the likes of Bill Gates or Steve Jobs patiently making their way up a company hierarchy; likewise, many people will always prefer the relative security of a decent salary.

But there also exists a substantial group of people who, while not natural risk-takers, are nevertheless driven to succeed, and dream of the independence that wealth brings. For them, the choice is clear. On the one hand, they can find a gap in a competitive market, raise start-up capital (perhaps mortgaging the family home), hire staff and crack the bureaucracy, all the while knowing that their business might well fail. On the other hand, they can play the corporate game, earning enough for a comfortable lifestyle on the way up, with a massive risk-free pot of gold on offer if they reach the top.

The former course may seem more romantic, but the latter is difficult to resist. Extremely high pay, often perceived as a symbol of capitalist success, is in reality a major impediment to its success. The talent myth that sustains such excess must be confronted.

David Bolchover (www.davidbolchover.com) is the author of "Pay Check: Are Top Earners Really Worth It?" (Coptic Publishing).

 
 
 
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07:49 PM on 04/01/2010
Expecting a different result? Less than 2% of Americans make $250,000 a year. Pardon me, but doesn’t that make the rest of us totally irrational? Why would anyone want to participate in a system that consistently presents as a lottery? Did 98% of us miss a meeting???

"Tim" Berners-Lee, OM, KBE, FRS, FREng, FRSA , is a engineer and computer scientist and MIT professor credited with inventing the World Wide Web... I’ve heard he is content with around $120k.

As we speak, scientists are in the process of transforming skin cells into functional neurons.[take a few seconds to brood about that] ....so, if we can do this,

why in hell do we put up with this?....A spent piece of chariot trash from 1800BC the ego oriented, antiquated economic system continues to mock us and push us around.

Politicians disguised as business heros and big business disguised as “moral” heros try to put in a FIX for a global economic train wreck. Sorry Google, sorry world government leaders, this nasty old boy is high functioning, and aside from indexed greed, not in need of a “FIX”, it’s doing exactly what it is designed to do. We just don’t get it.

Thanks for a great article
06:01 AM on 03/30/2010
Your people should always want to pay you more. That day alas passed many many years ago. That is why it is irretreivable becasue just like everything else, if you don;t snatch that stick from the dog's mouth just before he gets to shore, neither of you will know how valuable it is.
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efmo
Oh no, my micro-bio is empty!
10:13 PM on 03/29/2010
Like the talents of athletes on steroids ;>) can command large sums of money (plus after the sports franchises can basically use taxpayer giveaways & subsidies to build their stadiums) and...
even more than the CEOs of companies that actually make things, it's the CEOs and execs of financial companies & private equity that have become piggies on steroids feeding at the trough (though the others have certainy helped in their insistence on their unbelievable "talent")
ThePeacemakers
Concerned Citizen
01:21 PM on 03/29/2010
With each day, people shoud be noticing that how their pay and too big to fail was aided was through taxpayer money.

Even before TARP. Look at the malfeance.

Wean the big boys off the taxpayer dollars. Then you'll put an end to too big to fail and the outrageous bonuses and exec pay.
11:55 AM on 03/29/2010
Corporate excutives sit on each other's boards and collude in looting the shareholders of their respective companies while rank and file employees continue to face declining real wages. They are basically embezzlers. We should bring back the 90% tax bracket for these swine, and pass laws that criminalize the worst abuses.
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JScott
John Galt's last name is McGuffin-Smithee
10:34 AM on 03/29/2010
Stating the obvious. Sadly one hardly sees this developing into policy and action both at the government and corporate level.
10:33 AM on 03/29/2010
It's highly insulting when those who've made it to the top of the corporate heap lecture the rest of us about the "meritocratic" nature of the system. Based on the pay differential, middle managers are being asked to believe that the guy at the top is several hundred times as talented as they.
10:23 AM on 03/29/2010
How much "talent" does it take to win the jackpot at a Las Vegas casino? Did the winner earn it?

It's been proven time and again that index funds beat managed funds in total returns. If "talent" was able to increase returns, this anomaly would not exist. The only real "talent" many of these people possess, is the ability to convince gullible (or corrupt) boards of their inflated worth. Much of many peoples success can be attributed to being at the right place at the right time. The problem with luck is it's lack of consistency.
10:03 AM on 03/29/2010
the late-Peter Drucker values were always timely for a properly functioning society
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tacevad
American SS Card Carrying Socialist
09:40 AM on 03/29/2010
reducing labor costs has been job one of capitalist free marketeers, I would like to point out to them that eliminating one ceo's salary equals nearly 300 workers.Perhaps companies looking to save money are now looking in the wrong places?
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Greg0658
09:37 AM on 03/29/2010
good thread .. talent needs to be paid for talents sake in this system .. but the system is drift'g towards to much concentraited wealth and the balance is wacked

I favor a gradually increasing scale of a flat tax - not Steve Forbes flat tax as I understand it .. a long tail gradually increase'g scale .. the scale always let you get more for achieve'g - but the systems scale understands where your wealth comes from - The Common People

now this system wouldn't be full of tons of walk around it games - tax carveouts .. so tax accountants may need to find another profession
... for every action there is an opposite and equal reaction
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Carl Caroli
Give peace a chance
09:28 AM on 03/29/2010
Rewarding competitive talent by definition takes you to the edge. An Olympic skier is but a minor mistake away from of catastrophe and has to stay there to beat the competition. It's one thing to reward sports figures that way, it's another thing when that person is playing with my 401k.
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Greg0658
09:47 AM on 03/29/2010
this is another aspect all-together .. train hard for year after year to be 1st string Gold .. and then something doesn't work out .. now you need a job that provides a living without that 21st century job skill train'g because you were persue'g perfection elsewhere all in the hands of handlers .. in this capitalism system to an extent you played and lost and in my twisting of concepts of Rep. Grayson of FL "die quickly - your on your own - thats the game"
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Greg0658
10:00 AM on 03/29/2010
ps - cases in point .. our child actors in Hollywood
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blueken
Finger Picking blues man
09:27 AM on 03/29/2010
My favorite argument is that we don't understand. They tell us that if we if we put an end to fraud and the Ponzi schemes they have invented the economy will collapse. Correct me if I'm wrong, but wasn't it fraud and Ponzi schemes that got us where we are today? Wasn't this "talent" that invented these "innovations" the ones that were responsible? Last but not least, doesn't the free market punish failure. Is that the part of the free market system they don't like. They are asking us to allow them to take risks and back them up if the loose. That I understand.
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blueken
Finger Picking blues man
09:16 AM on 03/29/2010
"they are upholding the principles of the free market" These bankers are upholding the priciples of the free market, like whores uphold the priciples of love and family. Not so much in my opinion...................
ThatsTheTheWayItIs
religion, ideology, partisanship are delusional
09:04 AM on 03/29/2010
Excess profits and return on investment is the real problem. The cost of capital, not labor.
What the article is saying is "high cost of labor hurts return on capital". Too bad.

Even overpaid CEOs do something for their money, while idle-rich investors reap most of the reward.
But that's capitalism, by definition: the elevation of capital over labor.