Guest Post by
The following speaks for itself.
From Fortune:
The retirement assets of 100 Fortune 500 CEOs are worth more than the entire nest eggs of 41% of American families, a new study shows.
That means the 100 largest CEO retirement accounts—which totaled $4.9 billion last year—would equal the total saved by 50 million U.S. families, according to a report that was jointly published by the Institute for Policy Studies and the Center for Effective Government.
Now here’s the truly egregious part of all this…
“The CEOs’ extraordinary nest eggs are not the result of extraordinary performance,” said Scott Klinger, director of Revenue and Spending Policies at the Center for Effective Government, in a statement. “They are the result of rules intentionally tipped to reward those already on the highest rungs of the ladder.”
In fact, CEOs will quite often still receive enormous payouts even after wrecking their own companies, or engaging in highly questionable, if not criminal, behavior. Here are a coupled of recent examples:
United Airlines CEO Walks Away with $21 Million Exit Package After Resigning Due to Corruption Probe
Rewarding Failure – Volkswagen CEO to Receive $32 Million Pension
And let’s not forget the golden parachute received by Presidential candidate Carly Fiorina after cratering Hewlett Packard. See: Carly Fiorina’s Business Record Is At Least As Bad As Donald Trump’s.
In Liberty,
Michael Krieger
Given that the bottom quarter or half or whatever have no savings, what a surprise. My assets are probably more than the bottom 100 million, too.
100,000,000 times zero is zero.
“They are the result of rules intentionally tipped to reward those already on the highest rungs of the ladder.”
Who made these rules? Hmmmm….lets do some interweb searching…..
Ah, the government did, and do we believe for one second that politicians from both parties, who depend on the wealthy, who bow to the wealthy, will change the rules?
Is a bear Catholic? Does the pope shit in the woods?
All those bonuses for being Too Big to Fail well invested.
Agree with the sentiment but the math doesn’t look realistic. $98 per family only? And $490 million per scumbag CEO? Ya sure?
Why would you keep working?
If I got a job making $1 million a year, I’d only have to work for one more year (well, two, since the government would take half of it). But then I’d just quit working! I’d have enough to live on $25,000 a year for the rest of my life.