I gave an overview of the problem earlier;
This is the problem;
Quote;
''Across all companies, the average CEO pay was $13.8 million per year, the average median worker pay was about $77,800, and the average ratio of CEO pay to median worker pay was 204. In other words, on average, CEOs earn around 204 times what his or her median worker earns.Aug 25, 2015''
That's an out-of-context quote. No, across all companies, the average CEO pay was obviously not $13.8 million per year, a plainly ridiculous figure. Most companies don't even have $13.8 million in
revenue. By "all companies", Glassdoor was referring only to the 441 companies they surveyed, all selected
from the Fortune 500 list. Glassdoor elaborates: "Executives at many small and mid-sized firms are paid dramatically less. Looking only at America’s largest firms gives a misleading view of the ratio of CEO pay to worker pay throughout the economy."
Moreover, even among just those companies, on average, CEOs do not earn around 204 times what their median workers earn. Glassdoor elaborates: "To make a fair comparison, we compare total CEO pay to total worker pay. However, while CEO pay for bonuses, stock options and other pay beyond base salary is accurately reported in SEC filings, most workers underreport bonuses and stock options in surveys, such as Glassdoor’s salary survey. Most workers simply don’t know or don’t recall the details of non-salary compensation. As a result, total pay is likely underreported for workers, which could overstate CEO pay ratios.
We are not talking about CEO's who ''get paid less than doctors'' (not all doctors have the same income), we are discussing excessive incomes, and wealth, of a small percentage of the population....which, taken as a whole, exceeds the wealth of the rest of us
You're talking about
441 people. That's a lot less than 1% of Americans. According to you, the entire richest 1% own less wealth than the rest of us, so it is mathematically impossible for 441 rich people to own more wealth than the rest of us. What evidence do you have that CEO pay is a large scale problem?
Key Facts
The richest 1% of Americans own 35% of the nation's wealth. The bottom 80% own just 11% of the nation's wealth.
That's not a fact. That's a statement of religious faith. It transparently relies on the unfalsifiable metaphysical premise that when a rich American owns some item of wealth, that item is magically also simultaneously owned by the nation. I own my car. It may be 22 years old and have 380,000 miles on it, so it's not worth a whole lot, but it's still my car. It's not America's car. It isn't part of "the nation's wealth". It's part of my wealth. Owning my car does not make me own a 100 billionth of the nation' wealth. I own a 300 millionth of the nation's wealth, plus 100% of my wealth.
In the 1950s and 1960s, when the economy was booming, the wealthiest Americans paid a top income tax rate of 91%. Today, the top rate is 43.4%.
In the first place, that's nonsense. You clearly aren't counting state income tax. And in the second place, what's your point? Why are you offering that as though it were evidence of a problem? You are clearly relying on the unstated and unevidenced premise that tax rates on the rich should always ratchet upward -- that there can simply be no such thing in principle as rich people being overtaxed. Without that premise, tax rates dropping from 91% to 43% could just as easily mean there was a problem back in the 1950s and 1960s that has since been solved, as meaning there's a problem now.
The ratchet principle is a fixture of leftist thinking on taxation. It comes up over and over in this sort of discussion, usually unselfconsciously, without even a hint that the writer is aware he's introduced a premise he hasn't supported. So what justifies it? The theory that America owns all Americans' wealth? So any of our earnings we're graciously allowed to keep are a gift to us?
The richest 1% pay an effective federal income tax rate of 24.7% in 2014; someone making an average of $75,000 is paying a 19.7% rate.
And that's a problem because...? Seems to me it ought to be feasible to run a government on the amount that would raise. (Sure, we'd probably have to cut military spending a bit. But then it seems to me we could get by with a smaller military if we started fewer wars.)
The average federal income tax rate of the richest 400 Americans was just 20 percent in 2009.
Well, not knowing the details of their individual situations, who knows if that's a problem? You can be incredibly rich but have low income, after all. But assuming their income is in proportion to their wealth, that sounds like a sign that there's a problem with the tax system, and that it would be fairer if they were paying 24.7% like the rest of the 1% -- or perhaps that the richest 1% should be paying just 20%. But 400 people paying 4.7% too little tax doesn't strike me as a very large scale problem. The government's trying to inflict a whole new drug war on us over manufactured opioid hysteria, and I'm supposed to get
outraged over a few people with smart accountants who found a 4.7% tax loophole? Go hire a smarter accountant to figure out how to close the loophole, and move on.
Taxing investment income at a much lower rate than salaries and wages are taxed loses $1.3 trillion over 10 years.
That's not a fact. In the first place, we don't tax investment income at a much lower rate than salaries and wages. That's make-believe. A great deal of the "investment income" Americans are taxed on is
fictitious income. It's an artifact of the government's choice to inflate the currency and then measure the purchase price and the sales price of an investment in different sized dollars. But the tax on the fictitious income is very real. Back when the nominal capital gains tax rate was 20%, an average investor getting average returns over a period with average inflation was paying enough real tax on fake income to roughly compensate for the difference in nominal rates, so her real investment income was effectively taxed at roughly the same rate as wages. With the addition of the Obamacare net investment income tax, capital gains are now taxed more heavily than wages.
And in the second place, even if the lower rate were real, claiming a lower rate "loses $1.3 trillion" is not a fact. It's another statement of religious faith. Not taking something is not the same thing as losing it. Suppose you bet on Justify in the Preakness and won $100. That means the bookie lost $100. You could have bet on him in the Kentucky Derby and won $250, back when the odds were longer. But you didn't. You waited til he looked more like a sure thing. Too bad for you, no guts, no glory. But the fact that you only got $100 and not the $250 you could have gotten does not mean you lost $150, or that the bookie gained $150. The bookie still lost $100. Sure, you could have gotten $250 but you didn't. Sure, you ended up with $150 less than you would have if you'd made the longer bet. Those are facts. But those facts do not magically make "You lost $150" into a fact. To decide it means you lost $150 takes religious faith.
Here's a quick fact-based way to tell who's losing money: check which direction the money is going. Even if we taxed after-inflation investment income at 20% and wages at 37%, that would mean
the investors are losing money. Not as much as the wage-earners are losing, but losing all the same. It wouldn't mean the tax collector is losing money. This is not rocket science. It doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure out that shutting off the rocket engine does not cause the rocket's exhaust to flow back into the nozzle.
1,470 households reported income of more than $1 million in 2009 but paid zero federal income taxes on it.
Oh my god! You seriously wrote that.
And that fact is supposed to support your contention that CEOs being paid so much is a problem, how, exactly? What, John the CEO evaded his taxes and that means Jane the CEO ought to be required to have less money? If Saul, a Jewish man, figured out how to pay no taxes on $1 million in income, do you perhaps feel that the rest of us should compensate ourselves for his gaming the system, by imposing a special surtax on the Jews?
If you'd written what you just wrote, about anybody but rich people, you'd have been instantly recognized as a bigot by pretty much everyone. But you wrote it casually, without any hint you were aware how appalling the argument you were making is. You did it for exactly the same reason that casual antisemitism raised no eyebrows a hundred years ago: because bigotry against CEOs is socially acceptable in your subculture.
30 percent of income inequality is due to unfair taxes and budget cuts to services and benefits.
That's a "Key Fact", is it? "Unfair" is a moral judgment. So you are claiming the existence of moral facts. You're a believer in the objectivity of morality, it seems. Well, then, which is the correct moral theory? What is the criterion by which we can all objectively determine for ourselves which taxes and budget cuts are unfair?
The largest contributor to increasing income inequality has been changes in income from capital gains and dividends.
Income inequality is decreasing.