TOO MUCH (Annals of Inequality— 19 August 2013)

Too Much August 19, 2013
THIS WEEK
Just when did modern executive pay start down the road to abominable excess? We now have a much better idea, thanks to Duff McDonald, the author of a new history on the McKinsey corporate consulting empire. McDonald, we learned last week, has identified the “godfather of CEO megapay.”That godfather, McKinsey consultant Arch Patton, started studying executive pay back in the 1950s, a humbling time for CEOs. His surveys revealed that executive pay, after inflation, had actually been shrinking since the late 1930s.

America’s CEOs would soon become huge Arch Patton fans, and Patton’s executive pay consulting — he helped corporations put in place new bonus plans — would become a huge cash cow for McKinsey. But Patton himself would start having second thoughts. By the 1980s, CEO pay had started soaring significantly, and Patton was telling reporters he felt “guilty” about the soar.

In 1982, CEOs were making 42 times worker pay. Patton considered that far too wide a gap. So does Rep. Barbara Lee. She now has a bill before Congress that discourages any pay gap wider than 25 times. Our current gap? Over 350 times. This week in Too Much, more on Lee’s bill and the obstacles she’s facing.

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GREED AT A GLANCE
Some of us may be rich, some poor, but deep down we all have the same make-up, right? Not so fast, say researchers at the European Centre for Environment and Human Health. Inequality, they note in a new study, is differentiating our insides. Rich Americans, for instance, show higher levels of oxybenzone, an ingredient in sunscreen lotions that some experts link to skin cancer. Poor Americans show more Bisphenol-A, a banned substance in Europe that still lines food cans in the United States. These new findings, says researcher Jessica Tyrrell, should help policy makers understand that toxins threaten people at all income levels. The difference? The rich can more easily dodge the dangers . . .Darren RichmondIn our contemporary age of hyper “financialization,” Americans of means don’t just lobby government officials. They place bets on the decisions they expect these officials to make. The latest hedge fund to score a betting windfall: GSO Capital Partners, a Blackstone Group unit, scored a $100 million payday this May betting that New York insurance regulators would opt to protect big banks over average citizens with bonds in their retirement portfolios. Darren Richmond, the orchestrator of Blackstone’s winning bet, apparently turned so nervous worrying about the outcome that he had to go out on a 10-mile run to “de-stress.”

In the world of luxury, says cultural commentator Jill Lawless, “a higher level of extravagance exists to set the super-rich apart from the merely affluent.” Take handbags, Lawless suggests in a new analysis. Luxury handbag maker Hermes offers its coveted Birkin model, a crowd-pleaser since the 1980s, for as little as $10,000. But that same design, with a little fabric-switching and jewel-stitching, can turn into a bag fit only for the wrist of the super rich. Hermes has introduced four new Birkins “crafted from gold and studded with precious gems.” The company, Hermes CEO Patrick Thomas admits, has gone “a bit crazy” with these four new clutches. Two years in the making, they feature “thousands of individually crafted diamonds.” The price: $1.9 million each.

 

Quote of the Week

“If nobody dreamed of a better world, what would there be to wake up to?”
Gary Younge, The Misremembering of ‘I Have a Dream,’ The Nation, August 14, 2013

PETULANT PLUTOCRAT OF THE WEEK
Tim ArmstrongIn business circles, they like to describe AOL’s Tim Armstrong as an “impetuous CEO who fires from the hip.” Armstrong, a former Google hotshot, earlier this month fired away literally. He sacked Abel Lenz, the creative director of AOL’s local news network Patch, during a conference call with a thousand employees on it. Abel’s sin? He was filming his boss, a common practice in previous such calls. Armstrong’s tirade against Abel — “Abel, put that camera down right now. Abel, you’re fired! Out!” — would quickly go viral online. Last week Armstrong “apologized,” without reinstating Abel. But he still owes an apology to the hundreds of Patch staffers about to be axed. Patch is stumbling, and the Columbia Journalism Review is blaming poor management. CEO Armstrong’s compensation, meanwhile, last year totaled $12.07 million.  

 

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IMAGES OF INEQUALITY
Robert Reich filmGraph the top 1 percent share of America’s income over the last 100 years, former labor secretary Robert Reich marvels in the engaging new feature film Inequality for All, and you get a veritable suspension bridge: an almost identical hyperconcentration of income in the 1920s and then again today. Inequality for All will debut in theaters September 27. Just released: the film’s official trailer.  

 

 

 

Web Gem

BornRich/ An eight-year-old genuflection to excess that “curates the good things in life” — and regularly supplies ample evidence that wealth today sits far too concentrated.

PROGRESS AND PROMISE
Barbara LeeEarlier this month Senators Jack Reed (D-R.I.) and Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) introduced the Stop Subsidizing Multimillion Dollar Corporate Bonuses Act, legislation that would prevent U.S. corporations from deducting off their taxes — as they routinely do now — any individual executive compensation that runs over $1 million. This S.1476 reflects the spirit of an even stiffer bill that Rep. Barbara Lee has introduced in the House. Her Income Equity Act, H.R. 199, would deny corporations tax deductions on any executive pay over $500,000 — or 25 times the compensation of a corporation’s lowest-paid employee. With the current nearly unlimited deductibility of executive pay, Lee notes, ordinary American taxpayers “are actually subsidizing” the income inequality that excessive executive compensation creates. Take Action
on Inequality

Fast food CEOs average $25,000 in pay per day, over twice what fast food workers average for an entire year, notes Fast Food Forward, the new advocacy group now running a national petition drive to narrow the industry’s CEO-worker gap.

 

inequality by the numbers
Political contributions  

Stat of the Week

Two new infographics are compellingly illustrating how inequality hurts. Some 44 percent of Americans, notes Paycheck-to-Paycheck, lack enough savings to get through three months jobless. The SAT test score gap between rich and poor kids, adds The Rich Get Richer, has widened by 40 percent over the last 50 years — and now nearly doubles the black/white SAT gap.

IN FOCUS
Why Can’t Democracy Trump Inequality?Voters of modest means outnumber voters of excessive means in every election. Yet public policy in America essentially comforts only the already comfortable. Four political scientists have an explanation.

Fifty years ago, average Americans lived in a society that had been growing — and had become — much more equal. In 1963, of every $100 in personal income, less than $10 went to the nation’s richest 1 percent.

Americans today live in a land much more unequal. The nation’s top 1 percent are taking just under 20 percent of America’s income, double the 1963 level.

But no Americans, in all the years since 1963, have ever voted for doubling the income share of America’s most affluent. No candidates, in all those years, have ever campaigned on a platform that called for enriching the already rich.

Yet the rich have been enriched. America’s top 0.01 percent reported incomes in 1963 that averaged $4.1 million in today’s dollars. In 2011, the most recent year with stats available, our top 0.01 percent averaged $23.7 million, nearly six times more than their counterparts in 1963, after taking inflation into account.

This colossal upward redistribution of income took years to unfold, and — for many of those years — most Americans didn’t even realize that some grand redistribution was even taking place.

Few Americans remain that clueless today. Most of us now have a fairly clear sense that American society has become fundamentally — and dangerously — more unequal. The starkly contrasting fortunes of America’s 1 and 99 percent have become a staple of America’s political discourse.

So why is this stark contrast continuing to get even starker?

Americans do, after all, live amid democratic institutions. Why haven’t the American people, through these institutions, been able to undo the public policies that squeeze the bottom 99 percent and lavishly reward the crew at the top?

Why, in other words, hasn’t democracy slowed rising inequality?

Four political scientists are taking a crack at answering exactly this question in the current issue of the American Economic Association’s Journal of Economic Perspectives, a special issue devoted to debating America’s vast gulf between the rich and everyone else.

The four analysts — Stanford’s Adam Bonica, Princeton’s Nolan McCarty, Keith Poole from the University of Georgia, and NYU’s Howard Rosenthal — lay out a nuanced reading of the American political scene that explores the interplay of a wide variety of factors, everything from the impact of the partisan gerrymandering of legislative districts to voter turnout by income level.

But one particular reality dramatically drives their analysis: Societies that let wealth concentrate at enormously intense levels will quite predictably end up with a wealthy who can concentrate enormous resources on getting their way.

These wealthy underwrite political campaigns. They spend fortunes on lobbying. They keep politicians and bureaucrats “friendly” to their interests with a “revolving door” that promises lucrative employment in the private sector.

Bonica, McCarty, Poole, and Rosenthal do an especially engaging job exploring, with both data and anecdotal evidence, just how deeply America’s super rich have come to dominate the nation’s election process.

One example from their new paper: Back in 1980, no American gave out more in federal election political contributions than Cecil Haden, the owner of a tugboat company. Haden contributed all of $1.72 million, in today’s dollars, almost six times more than any other political contributor in 1980.

In the 2012 election cycle, by contrast, just one deep-pocket couple alone, gaming industry giant Sheldon Adelson and his wife Miriam, together shelled out $103.4 million to bend politics in their favored wealth-concentrating direction.

The Adelsons sit comfortably within the richest 0.01 percent of America’s voting age population. Over 40 percent of the contributions to American political campaigns are now emanating from this super-rich elite strata.

In the 1980s, campaign contributions from the top 0.01 percent roughly equaled the campaign contributions from all of organized labor. In 2012, note political scientists Bonica, McCarty, Poole, and Rosenthal in their new analysis, America’s top 0.01 percent all by themselves “outspent labor by more than a 4:1 margin.”

Donors in this top 0.01 percent, their analysis adds, “give pretty evenly to Democrats and Republicans” — and they get a pretty good return on their investment. Both “Democrats as well as Republicans,” the four analysts observe, have come to “rely on big donors.”

The results from this reliance? Back in the 1930s, Democrats in Congress put in place the financial industry regulations that helped create a more equal mid-20th century America. In our time, Democrats have helped undo these regulations.

In 1993, a large cohort of Democrats in Congress backed the legislation that ended restrictions on interstate banking. In 1999, Democrats helped pass the bill that let federally insured commercial banks make speculative investments.

The next year, a block of congressional Democrats blessed the measure that prevented the regulation of “derivatives,” the exotic new financial bets that would go on to wreak economic havoc in 2008.

We’ll never be able to fully “gauge the effect of the Democrats’ reliance on contributions from the wealthy,” acknowledge political scientists Bonica, McCarty, Poole, and Rosenthal. But at the least, they continue, this reliance “does likely preclude a strong focus on redistributive policies” that would in any significant way discomfort the movers and shakers who top America’s moneyed class.

Conventional economists, the four analysts add, tend to ascribe rising inequality to broad trends like globalization and technological change — and ignore the political decisions that determine how these trends play out in real life.

New technologies, for instance, don’t automatically have to concentrate wealth — and these new technologies wouldn’t have that impact if intellectual property laws, a product of political give-and-take, better protected the public interest.

But too many lawmakers and other elected leaders can’t see that “public interest.” Cascades of cash — from America’s super rich — have them conveniently blinded.

New Wisdom
on Wealth

Matt Bruenig, What to Do About Social Capital Inequality, PolicyShop, August 13, 2013. How we can reduce the income-concentrating impact of insider networks.

Matthew O’Brien, Why Is Inequality So Much Higher in the U.S. Than in France? Atlantic, August 14, 2013. Blame Wall Street.

Colin Gordon, Mind the Gap, Dissent, August 15, 2013. The overall health of the economy hasn’t battered America’s workers. A dramatic change in the nation’s distribution of rewards has.

 

 

 

 

 

The Rich Don’t Always Win: The Forgotten Triumph over Plutocracy that Created the American Middle Class cover

Check online for the intro to The Rich Don’t Always Win, the new book about the triumph over America’s original plutocracy by Too Much editor Sam Pizzigati.

NEW AND notable
Creating a New System for Creating WealthA Symposium on Alternatives to Capitalism. Papers by Gar Alperovitz and Steve Dubb, Thomas Hanna, Joe Guinan, Marjorie Kelly, Thad Williamson, and Joel Rogers. The Good Society: the journal of the Committee on the Political Economy of the Good Society. Penn State University Press, Vol. 22, No. 1, 2013.

Scholars and activists around the Democracy Collaborative are launching a new initiative they call the “Next System Project.” The goal: to generate “alternative models — different from both corporate capitalism and state socialism — capable of delivering superior ecological, social, and economic outcomes.”

Just what does that mean? The current issue of the Good Society journal — available online free now through the end of August — sports a half-dozen papers that offer a tantalizing glimpse at a variety of visionary yet practical paths out of “America’s Lockean rock ‘n’ roll political wilderness.”

Almost all these paths aim to encourage “more cooperative ways of producing wealth.” Take a look. You might find a path you’d like to follow.

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About Too Much
Too Much, an online weekly publication of the Institute for Policy Studies | 1112 16th Street NW, Suite 600, Washington, DC 20036 | (202) 234-9382 | Editor: Sam Pizzigati. | E-mail: editor@toomuchonline.org | Unsubscribe.