From Robert Reich - follow link to original.
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http://robertreich.org/
It’s often assumed that people are paid what they’re worth. According
to this logic, minimum wage workers aren’t worth more than the $7.25 an
hour they now receive. If they were worth more, they’d earn more. Any
attempt to force employers to pay them more will only kill jobs.
According to this same logic, CEOs of big companies are worth their
giant compensation packages, now averaging 300 times pay of the typical
American worker. They must be worth it or they wouldn’t be paid this
much. Any attempt to limit their pay is fruitless because their pay will
only take some other form.
"Paid-what-you’re-worth" is a dangerous myth.
Fifty years ago, when General Motors was the largest employer in
America, the typical GM worker got paid $35 an hour in today’s dollars.
Today, America’s largest employer is Walmart, and the typical Walmart
workers earns $8.80 an hour.
Does this mean the typical GM employee a half-century ago was worth
four times what today’s typical Walmart employee is worth? Not at all.
Yes, that GM worker helped produce cars rather than retail sales. But he
wasn’t much better educated or even that much more productive. He often
hadn’t graduated from high school. And he worked on a slow-moving
assembly line. Today’s Walmart worker is surrounded by digital gadgets —
mobile inventory controls, instant checkout devices, retail search
engines — making him or her quite productive.
The real difference is the GM worker a half-century ago had a strong
union behind him that summoned the collective bargaining power of all
autoworkers to get a substantial share of company revenues for its
members. And because more than a third of workers across America
belonged to a labor union, the bargains those unions struck with
employers raised the wages and benefits of non-unionized workers as
well. Non-union firms knew they’d be unionized if they didn’t come close
to matching the union contracts.
Today’s Walmart workers don’t have a union to negotiate a better
deal. They’re on their own. And because fewer than 7 percent of today’s
private-sector workers are unionized, non-union employers across America
don’t have to match union contracts. This puts unionized firms at a
competitive disadvantage. The result has been a race to the bottom.
By the same token, today’s CEOs don’t rake in 300 times the pay of
average workers because they’re “worth” it. They get these humongous pay
packages because they appoint the compensation committees on their
boards that decide executive pay. Or their boards don’t want to be seen
by investors as having hired a “second-string” CEO who’s paid less than
the CEOs of their major competitors. Either way, the result has been a
race to the top.
If you still believe people are paid what they’re worth, take a look at Wall Street bonuses. Last year’s average bonus was up 15
percent over the year before, to more than $164,000. It was the largest
average Wall Street bonus since the 2008 financial crisis and the third
highest on record, according to New York’s state comptroller. Remember, we’re talking bonuses, above and beyond salaries.
All told, the Street paid out a whopping $26.7 billion in bonuses last year.
Are Wall Street bankers really worth it? Not if you figure in the
hidden subsidy flowing to the big Wall Street banks that ever since the
bailout of 2008 have been considered too big to fail.
People who park their savings in these banks accept a lower interest
rate on deposits or loans than they require from America’s smaller
banks. That’s because smaller banks are riskier places to park money.
Unlike the big banks, the smaller ones won’t be bailed out if they get
into trouble.
This hidden subsidy gives Wall Street banks a competitive advantage
over the smaller banks, which means Wall Street makes more money. And as
their profits grow, the big banks keep getting bigger.
How large is this hidden subsidy? Two researchers, Kenichi Ueda of
the International Monetary Fund and Beatrice Weder di Mauro of the
University of Mainz, have calculated it’s about eight tenths of a percentage point.
This may not sound like much but multiply it by the total amount of
money parked in the ten biggest Wall Street banks and you get a huge
amount — roughly $83 billion a year.
Recall that the Street paid out $26.7 billion in bonuses last year.
You don’t have to be a rocket scientist or even a Wall Street banker to
see that the hidden subsidy the Wall Street banks enjoy because they’re
too big to fail is about three times what Wall Street paid out in
bonuses.
Without the subsidy, no bonus pool.
By the way, the lion’s share of that subsidy ($64 billion a
year) goes to the top five banks — JPMorgan, Bank of America, Citigroup,
Wells Fargo. and Goldman Sachs. This amount just about equals these
banks’ typical annual profits. In other words, take away the subsidy and
not only does the bonus pool disappear, but so do all the profits.
The reason Wall Street bankers got fat paychecks plus a total of
$26.7 billion in bonuses last year wasn’t because they worked so much
harder or were so much more clever or insightful than most other
Americans. They cleaned up because they happen to work in institutions —
big Wall Street banks — that hold a privileged place in the American
political economy.
And why, exactly, do these institutions continue to have such
privileges? Why hasn’t Congress used the antitrust laws to cut them down
to size so they’re not too big to fail, or at least taxed away their
hidden subsidy (which, after all, results from their taxpayer-financed
bailout)?
Perhaps it’s because Wall Street also accounts for a large proportion
of campaign donations to major candidates for Congress and the
presidency of both parties.
America’s low-wage workers don’t have privileged positions. They work
very hard — many holding down two or more jobs. But they can’t afford
to make major campaign contributions and they have no political clout.
According to the Institute for Policy Studies,
the $26.7 billion of bonuses Wall Street banks paid out last year would
be enough to more than double the pay of every one of America’s
1,085,000 full-time minimum wage workers.
The remainder of the $83 billion of hidden subsidy going to those
same banks would almost be enough to double what the government now
provides low-wage workers in the form of wage subsidies under the Earned
Income Tax Credit.
But I don’t expect Congress to make these sorts of adjustments any time soon.
The “paid-what-your-worth” argument is fundamentally misleading
because it ignores power, overlooks institutions, and disregards
politics. As such, it lures the unsuspecting into thinking nothing
whatever should be done to change what people are paid, because nothing
can be done.
Don’t buy it.
Ten Economic Questions for 2025
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Here is a review of the Ten Economic Questions for 2024.
Below are my ten questions for 2025 (I've been doing this online every year
for 20 years!). These...
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