Comp Home | BLR Home | HR.BLR.com | Safety.BLR.com | Enviro.BLR.com | Free Newsletters
Login Become a Member
BLR -- Business & Legal Reports Compensation.BLR.com -- Where Employers Go for Reliable Compensation Data and Tools
You are NOT logged in
 
Library
Salary Center

Benefits Center

Performance Appraisals
Advanced Search


Site Navigator
State-Specific Compensation Compliance Information


Compensation Topics
 
 A to Z Topic List
Topics by Category:
 • General
 • Minimum Wage
 • Overtime & Exemptions
 • Benefits
 • Wage & Payment Laws
 

Compensation Library
 
 Legal Analysis
 • State/Federal Differences
 Survey Reports
 • Pay Budgets
 • Exempt Compensation
 • Nonexempt Compensation
 

 
 Tools
 • Salary Center
 • Calculators
 • Job Descriptions
 • Performance Appraisals
 • Forms
 • Model Policies
 • Checklists
 

 
 Best Practices
 • Feature Articles
 • White Papers
 

 
 Daily News
 

 
 Compensation Ezine
 

 
 Compensation Links
 

Ask the Compensation Experts

RSS Compensation News Feed

HR Conferences

Tell a Friend

Related Websites
BLR
HR.BLR.com
Enviro.BLR.com
Safety.BLR.com
 
Compensation Administration—News


08/30/2001
Study: Layoffs Bring Payouts to CEOs

 Related Resources
White Papers
Feature Articles
Calculators
Checklists
Policies
Forms
Questions & Answers
Send this article to a friend
Print this article


Chief executives of big corporations were rewarded last year for making job cuts, according to a new study conducted by two liberal advocacy groups.

A "decade of greed" in the 1990s was followed last year by a particularly "blatant pattern of CEOs benefitting at the expense of their workers," the Institute for Policy Studies and United for a Fair Economy said in their latest annual pay survey.

The study found that chief executives of the 52 major companies that announced layoffs of at least 1,000 employees in the first half of 2000 earned some 80 percent more on average than CEOs at 365 big corporations surveyed by Business Week magazine.

The "layoff leaders" received an average $23.7 million in total compensation, including bonuses and stock options, compared with an average $13.1 million for CEOs overall, according to the study.

The top job-cutters got an average increase in salary and bonus of nearly 20 percent last year, compared with average raises for U.S. wage earners of around 3 percent and 4-percent increases for salaried employees.

Sarah Anderson, director of the global economy program at the Washington-based Institute for Policy Studies, told the Detroit News that it was galling "especially in this period of economic downturn, as people are feeling very insecure about their jobs, to see that the guys at the top have cushioned themselves."

Against the backdrop of massive layoffs, compensation packages for executives have drawn some criticism, the Detroit News observes.

For instance, after attorneys for troubled bicycle maker Schwinn/GT asked a bankruptcy judge to keep confidential the details of a $2 million bonus plan for top managers and executives, the judge questioned the plan's fairness to rank-and-file employees and expressed reservations about keeping the information under wraps.

"I'm going to do a little research," U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Sidney Brooks in Denver said last week, delaying immediate approval. "There are some pretty hefty bonuses here."

Schwinn lawyers said the compensation plan was designed to keep key personnel from quitting while the bike maker goes through Chapter 11 bankruptcy reorganization.

The Conference Board, a business organization, has criticized the liberal groups' executive pay surveys in the past because they include stock options for CEOs. The value of those packages can fluctuate, depending on the market, the Board notes.

The survey also said:

  • If the federal minimum wage, which was $3.80 an hour in 1990, had grown at the same rate as executive pay over the decade, it now would be $25.50 an hour as opposed to the current $5.15.
  • The 30 highest-paid women in big corporations each earned average total compensation of $8.7 million last year, compared with $112.9 million for the 30 highest-paid men.


To view the Detroit New story, click here.

View more resources on Compensation Administration.

Compensation Ezine
See this week's issue
Compensation Ezine
Find out how your company's pay and benefits policies stack up against the competition. Each issue features free compensation news, a timely poll, a tool of the week, in-depth white papers, a compensation Q&A and our popular "Odd Jobs" feature.
 
 
 



Compensation Ezine
Compensation news & best practices
HR Daily Advisor
Daily newsletter of quick HR tips, news, and practical advice
Strange But True
Weekly reports from HR's humorous side
Think you know a lot? Try the all-new HR Challenge!






We respect your privacy

Highlight
Payroll Quiz

 Weekly Poll
 
How often does your organization update employees on financial results?

More than once per month

Monthly

Quarterly

Annually

Never

We keep our employees in the dark

 




spacer
spacer

 Plain-English... Practical... FREE!
  HR Daily Advisor
Compensation Ezine
  Safety Daily Advisor
Environmental Ezine
   

        We respect your Privacy

spacer
spacer
Comp Home | HR Conferences | Site Map | About this Site | BLR Home | About BLR | FAQs | Contact Us | Terms and Conditions | Related Links | Advertise
Questions? Call: 1-800-454-0404


Compensation Categories:
General Compensation | Minimum Wage | Overtime and Exemptions | Benefits | Wage and Payment Laws

Resource Types:
Compliance Resources: Regulatory Analysis | Overview |
Best Practices: White Papers | Feature Articles |
News: News |
Tools: Calculators | Checklists | Policies | Forms |
Other Resources: Questions & Answers | Job Descriptions |

Regulatory Analysis, News, and Training Resources for Every State

Other Web Centers:
BLR Home | Online Catalog | HR.BLR.com | Safety.BLR.com | Enviro.BLR.com

Surveys:
Employee Survey

©1997-2008 Business & Legal Reports, Inc. All Rights Reserved
No part of this site may be reproduced in any form without permission of Business & Legal Reports, Inc.