Dally wrote:
One thing for sure is that our system of pay for FTSE 100 listed company directors is broken. I think the average director (not CEO / Chairman) remuneration is now c. £3.5 million. For sure:
- that is not buying "world class" talent;
But that is the very argument that is used to justify paying multi-million pound salaries.
Companies just
have to pay it. They don't really want to, you know. The remuneration committees, often made up of similar people who
have to be paid similar salaries themselves are only reacting to the market.
The fact they set the market is rather conveniently forgotten!
The living wage in London where all these CEO's tend to congregate is £8.55 per hour. For a 40 hour week that gives an annual salary of £17784. So the Swiss proposal would limit the top salary to £213,408. That would put you in the top 0.5% of earners in this country who draw a salary and are subject to PAYE. And that is what these top 1% or top 0.5% stats are based on. Salaries liable for PAYE. The really wealthy such as footballers, entertainers and even top company CEO's are often contracted to their employers in some way and don't figure in these statistics.
If the top earners really do command mega-salaries, pay them but put the lowest paid employee on 1/12 of the highest. CEO on £3m a year? Receptionist gets £250K. It sounds daft but its a better way of putting the high CEO salaries into perspective. If they really are worth £3m a year then their company should be earning billions. Enough to pay the lowest paid employee £250K. If they can't afford that then the CEO isn't worth £3m either.