Before the Bust, These CEOs Took Money Off the Table |
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CSR
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The Wall Street Journal (subscription required) conducted an analysis of the amount of money taken out of firms by their CEO before the financial crisis hit. Even the WSJ thinks it's not pretty: The credit bubble has burst. The economy is tanking. Investors in the U.S. stock market have lost more than $9 trillion since its peak a year ago. But in industries at the center of the crisis, plenty of top officials managed to emerge with substantial fortunes. Fifteen corporate chieftains of large home-building and financial-services firms each reaped more than $100 million in cash compensation and proceeds from stock sales during the past five years, according to a Wall Street Journal analysis. Global Research has an article on this WSJ survey. It finds the difference between the reality of corporate leaders behaviour and their spin quite striking: The Journal’s findings underscore the parasitism and criminality of the US financial elite. Defenders have long justified extravagant CEO pay by claiming that these were the talented “risk-takers” who generated enormous wealth for investors. But the Journal’s data shows that there is no correlation between compensation and a firm’s success. On the contrary, many CEOs rewarded themselves just as their corporations approached ruin.
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