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CEOs Earn 132 Times Average Wage (Read 1616 times)
whiteknight
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CEOs Earn 132 Times Average Wage
Jul 14th, 2022 at 6:26am
 
Australia’s top CEOs earn 132 times average wage   Sad
July 13 2022
New Daily
Want to earn as much as Australia’s highest-paid CEOs? Just buckle down and work hard for another 2332 years.

That’s how long it would take the average Australian worker to earn what Afterpay bosses Nick Molnar and Anthony Eisen did last financial year.

Each raked in more than $100 million from their buy now, pay later empire – setting a fresh record for Australia’s top-paid bosses.

It has all been revealed in a new report from the Australian Council of Superannuation Investors (ACSI), which tracked the eye-watering sums paid to CEOs at top ASX-listed companies.

Average realised pay for these executives reached an astonishing $9.14 million last financial year – about 132 times the average worker’s wage of $1328 per week.

But leaders at some well-known companies were paid much more, with CSL’s Paul Perreault making $58.9 million in realised pay and Woolworths’ Brad Banducci earning $11.7 million.

Executive bonuses soar
ACSI’s figures show that while most workers are struggling with stagnant wages growth, soaring inflation and rising mortgage bills, many CEOs are enjoying record payouts.   Sad

The huge pay days have shareholder advocates worried that CEO salaries are moving out of step with delivering value to superannuation accounts and other investors as the economic outlook sours.



Look no further than bonuses, which hit a record $2.31 million on average last year after most were paused during the pandemic.

In fact, the median bonus paid to CEOs rose from a record-low 31 per cent of the maximum rate to 76.7 per cent in the year to June.

ACSI executive manager Ed John said it was the highest rate of bonus payouts in seven years.

“After their lowest year on record, big bonuses have returned, but they haven’t just rebounded, they’ve hit new heights,” he said.

Mark McInnes, CEO at Smiggle owner Premier Investments – which infamously failed to repay its entire JobKeeper subsidy despite booking huge profits – enjoyed the largest bonus, at $2.7 million.

Advocates watchful on souring outlook
ACSI has been measuring these bonuses and other CEO pay metrics for 21 years now, combining factors like base wages, stock incentives and superannuation payments.

This leads to a measure called realised pay, which combines fixed remuneration with stocks to derive the total value in cash and wealth that CEOs draw from their companies.

Crucially, this doesn’t just count the cash that bosses walk away with. Instead, it captures the total benefit bosses receive after factoring in share valuations and money received from selling or owning stocks.



Fiona Balzer, policy and advocacy manager at the Australian Shareholders Association, said that realised pay is “valuable” for understanding the total scale of CEO remuneration.

For example, median cash pay for ASX100 CEOs soared 41 per cent this year to $2.8 million.

But median realised pay was much higher at $4.19 million, reflecting the value of share options, which are often drawn from prior financial years.

In either case, the money being paid to top executives is hundreds of times what the average Australian worker earns, and advocates fear shareholders aren’t getting enough value for their money.

“Investors, and ACSI, will be scrutinising closely the results-reporting season to see if this concerning trend of bonus ‘catch-up’ continues,” Mr John said.

“This year’s outcomes will be judged against a backdrop of difficult financial markets and an uncertain economic outlook.”

Ms Balzer said there were 17 shareholder strikes against company remuneration reports last financial year, suggesting investors have made their displeasure known about higher bonuses.

“We want the executives to be aligned with shareholders,” she said.

“But we’re also mindful that if you are terminating employees, or really tight on their wage growth, then it’s inappropriate to give largesse to executives.”

Ms Blazer said the ASA will be closely watching an upcoming round of reports for the current financial year to ensure CEO pay is in step with a worsening outlook for the local economy.
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FutureTheLeftWant
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Re: CEOs Earn 132 Times Average Wage
Reply #1 - Jul 14th, 2022 at 7:47am
 
whiteknight wrote on Jul 14th, 2022 at 6:26am:
Australia’s top CEOs earn 132 times average wage   Sad
July 13 2022
New Daily
Want to earn as much as Australia’s highest-paid CEOs? Just buckle down and work hard for another 2332 years.
.


But socialism is terrible and starves people.  AHHAHAHAAAAA!!!!!!
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freediver
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Re: CEOs Earn 132 Times Average Wage
Reply #2 - Jul 14th, 2022 at 5:32pm
 
FutureTheLeftWant wrote on Jul 14th, 2022 at 7:47am:
whiteknight wrote on Jul 14th, 2022 at 6:26am:
Australia’s top CEOs earn 132 times average wage   Sad
July 13 2022
New Daily
Want to earn as much as Australia’s highest-paid CEOs? Just buckle down and work hard for another 2332 years.
.


But socialism is terrible and starves people.  AHHAHAHAAAAA!!!!!!


Yes. 50 million Chinese last century. And they couldn't even get them to starve equally.
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People who can't distinguish between etymology and entomology bug me in ways I cannot put into words.
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FutureTheLeftWant
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Re: CEOs Earn 132 Times Average Wage
Reply #3 - Jul 14th, 2022 at 5:34pm
 
freediver wrote on Jul 14th, 2022 at 5:32pm:
FutureTheLeftWant wrote on Jul 14th, 2022 at 7:47am:
whiteknight wrote on Jul 14th, 2022 at 6:26am:
Australia’s top CEOs earn 132 times average wage   Sad
July 13 2022
New Daily
Want to earn as much as Australia’s highest-paid CEOs? Just buckle down and work hard for another 2332 years.
.


But socialism is terrible and starves people.  AHHAHAHAAAAA!!!!!!


Yes. 50 million Chinese last century. And they couldn't even get them to starve equally.


We still telling these lies? Why?
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aquascoot
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Re: CEOs Earn 132 Times Average Wage
Reply #4 - Jul 14th, 2022 at 6:09pm
 
you dont get paid for your time
you get paid for your value.

is it possible to become 132 x as valuable as the average person

of course
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FutureTheLeftWant
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Re: CEOs Earn 132 Times Average Wage
Reply #5 - Jul 14th, 2022 at 6:09pm
 
aquascoot wrote on Jul 14th, 2022 at 6:09pm:
you dont get paid for your time
you get paid for your value.

is it possible to become 132 x as valuable as the average person

of course


Right wing morons simping for capitalism.  ROTFL!!!
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John Smith
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Re: CEOs Earn 132 Times Average Wage
Reply #6 - Jul 14th, 2022 at 7:46pm
 
aquascoot wrote on Jul 14th, 2022 at 6:09pm:
you dont get paid for your time
you get paid for your value.

is it possible to become 132 x as valuable as the average person

of course



only when sycophants like you swallow that crap
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Our esteemed leader:
I hope that bitch who was running their brothels for them gets raped with a cactus.
 
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Grappler Deep State Feller
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Re: CEOs Earn 132 Times Average Wage
Reply #7 - Jul 14th, 2022 at 7:49pm
 
What value was that?

What exactly is it that they bring to the table?
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“Facts are stubborn things; and whatever may be our wishes, our inclinations, or the dictates of our passion, they cannot alter the state of facts and evidence.”
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aquascoot
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Re: CEOs Earn 132 Times Average Wage
Reply #8 - Jul 14th, 2022 at 8:06pm
 
Grappler Deep State Feller wrote on Jul 14th, 2022 at 7:49pm:
What value was that?

What exactly is it that they bring to the table?


CEO salaries took off under raegan and thatcher.

this marked the end of trade unions and CEO's salaries being more in alignment with the companies performance.

the economic boom of the nineties, and the last 2 decades ( australians under 30 have never lived in a recession) was the result of companies suddenly adding massive ammounts of value.

look at how magnificent the advances in phones, tv's, the internet, cameras, cars, whitegoods has been.

the value of these things in your life is truly under appreciated.

look at sectors of our society which still have managers who earn only a bit more then their staff.
the heads of education and health .

schools are probably worse now then 20 years ago
teachers are dumber, they have low morale
hospitals are more dysfunctional
it takes longer to get treatment , hospital staff have low morale


when you put champions in charge, we all benefit.

i'm sure JK rowling and tiger woods and novak earn more then 132 times what the average writer , golfer or tennis player earns.
they provide more value
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FutureTheLeftWant
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Re: CEOs Earn 132 Times Average Wage
Reply #9 - Jul 14th, 2022 at 8:07pm
 
aquascoot wrote on Jul 14th, 2022 at 8:06pm:
Grappler Deep State Feller wrote on Jul 14th, 2022 at 7:49pm:
What value was that?

What exactly is it that they bring to the table?


CEO salaries took off under raegan and thatcher.

this marked the end of trade unions and CEO's salaries being more in alignment with the companies performance.

the economic boom of the nineties, and the last 2 decades ( australians under 30 have never lived in a recession) was the result of companies suddenly adding massive ammounts of value.

look at how magnificent the advances in phones, tv's, the internet, cameras, cars, whitegoods has been.

the value of these things in your life is truly under appreciated.

look at sectors of our society which still have managers who earn only a bit more then their staff.
the heads of education and health .

schools are probably worse now then 20 years ago
teachers are dumber, they have low morale
hospitals are more dysfunctional
it takes longer to get treatment , hospital staff have low morale


when you put champions in charge, we all benefit.

i'm sure JK rowling and tiger woods and novak earn more then 132 times what the average writer , golfer or tennis player earns.
they provide more value


No, JK was the beneficiary of a trend. Not really the same thing.

The big thing with executive salaries was people didn't realise how much they made in stock options.  This has stopped but capitalism being what it is, executive salaries are not going down

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freediver
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Re: CEOs Earn 132 Times Average Wage
Reply #10 - Jul 14th, 2022 at 8:25pm
 
Grappler Deep State Feller wrote on Jul 14th, 2022 at 7:49pm:
What value was that?

What exactly is it that they bring to the table?


Better returns to shareholders. That's the only reason shareholders pay them so much.
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Re: CEOs Earn 132 Times Average Wage
Reply #11 - Jul 14th, 2022 at 8:30pm
 
These inflated salaries are part of neoliberalism.

CEO salaries were once kept confidential but neoliberalism saw them published. So a CEO-to-be would use the last CEO salary to argue for a better salary for himself (and the next tier of execs) to be higher than that.

Is this good for the country or its economy?

We hardly make a bloody thing in this country anymore, have to accept cheap imported crap instead.

Neoliberalism is killing and hollowing out the Australian economy!

Why is our Budget $1Trn in the red? Neoliberalism.
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freediver
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Re: CEOs Earn 132 Times Average Wage
Reply #12 - Jul 14th, 2022 at 8:33pm
 
Quote:
CEO salaries were once kept confidential but neoliberalism saw them published. So a CEO-to-be would use the last CEO salary to argue for a better salary for himself (and the next tier of execs) to be higher than that.


What a cunning trick. So why haven't the shareholders caught on yet?
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FutureTheLeftWant
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Re: CEOs Earn 132 Times Average Wage
Reply #13 - Jul 14th, 2022 at 8:40pm
 
freediver wrote on Jul 14th, 2022 at 8:33pm:
Quote:
CEO salaries were once kept confidential but neoliberalism saw them published. So a CEO-to-be would use the last CEO salary to argue for a better salary for himself (and the next tier of execs) to be higher than that.


What a cunning trick. So why haven't the shareholders caught on yet?


They make money, they don't care. Realistically it's cheaper to pay the CEO a ton, than all the workers a living wage
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freediver
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Re: CEOs Earn 132 Times Average Wage
Reply #14 - Jul 14th, 2022 at 8:45pm
 
FutureTheLeftWant wrote on Jul 14th, 2022 at 8:40pm:
freediver wrote on Jul 14th, 2022 at 8:33pm:
Quote:
CEO salaries were once kept confidential but neoliberalism saw them published. So a CEO-to-be would use the last CEO salary to argue for a better salary for himself (and the next tier of execs) to be higher than that.


What a cunning trick. So why haven't the shareholders caught on yet?


They make money, they don't care. Realistically it's cheaper to pay the CEO a ton, than all the workers a living wage


That is not the choice that shareholders are faced with. If you actually want to know why CEOs get paid so much, rather than just have something to whine about, you need to see the reality for what it is.
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