CEO-worker pay gap jumps in 2021 at low-wage U.S. companies
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[June 07, 2022]
By Simon Jessop
LONDON (Reuters) - The pay gap between
workers and CEOs at 300 publicly listed U.S. companies with the lowest
median wage jumped in 2021, a study from the Institute for Policy
Studies https://ips-dc.org (IPS) showed on Tuesday.
The average gap was 670 to 1, up from 604 to 1 in the prior year, while
49 companies had ratios above 1,000 to 1, the study showed. Average CEO
pay in the group climbed $2.5 million to $10.6 million, while median
worker pay rose $3,556 to $23,968.
The findings will give new ammunition to investors who push for social
justice causes as part of their environmental, social and governance (ESG)
agenda.
U.S. corporations face an unprecedented wave of ESG-related shareholder
resolutions this year, with the treatment of workers being one of the
issues raised frequently.
"During the pandemic, low-wage workers have demonstrated how essential
they are to the functioning of our economy. With profits rising in 2021,
corporations had an opportunity to make a big leap towards greater pay
equity," said Sarah Anderson, Global Economy Project Director at the IPS.
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Four thousand U.S. dollars are counted out by a banker counting
currency at a bank in Westminster, Colorado November 3, 2009.
REUTERS/Rick Wilking/File Photo
The study found that at 106 of the companies, median
worker pay failed to keep pace with the 4.7% average U.S. inflation
rate over the period. Of that group, 67 companies spent a combined
$43.7 billion on share buybacks in the period, boosting CEOs'
stock-based pay.
In response, growing numbers of workers are taking matters into
their own hands and looking to move jobs in the hunt for better pay,
working conditions or work-life balance, a trend known as "The Great
Resignation".
A March global survey by consultants PwC found one in five workers
was "extremely" or "very likely" to switch employers in the next 12
months.
The COVID-19 pandemic has led to increased attention by investors on
the way companies treat their staff, although, as was seen at
Amazon's recent annual meeting, many have baulked at opposing
management on such issues.
(Reporting by Simon Jessop in London. Editing by Jane Merriman)
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