Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service

by Holly Sklar

http://commondreams.org/views02/0830-02.htm

Labor Day came twice last year. A week after the parades and picnics,
Americans had their
real Labor Day on Sept. 11. Americans poured out thanks to firefighters,
police officers,
paramedics and other workers who put themselves on the line to save others.
Wall Street
stockbrokers and secretaries, CEOs and minimum wage workers died--and
survived--together.

The spirit of shared sacrifice was shattered in October as a parade of
companies led by Enron
began imploding from CEO greed.

Some of America's worst CEOs make more in a year than the best CEOs of
earlier generations
made in their lifetimes.

CEOs pumped up stock with accounting steroids, hitting quarterly earnings
homeruns while
doing serious damage to their companies, workers, shareholders and the
economy.

Global Crossing Chairman Gary Winnick, who Fortune called "the emperor of
greed," cashed in
$735 million in stock over four years while leading the company to
bankruptcy. The double
crossing Winnick bought a California estate worth $94 million after $30
million in renovations.

Meanwhile, reports NBC, "Global Crossing workers lost their jobs, their
severance pay, and
promised medical benefits. Entire 401(k)s were decimated. With the
exception of a select
group of executives, Global Crossing employees could not unload their stock
for five years."

Back in 1950, when Business Week began ranking CEO pay, the highest-paid
executive was
General Motors President Charles Wilson, who made $4.4 million in
inflation-adjusted dollars.

In 2001, the highest paid CEO was Oracle's Lawrence Ellison at $706
million--nearly $2 million
               a day.

Wilson would have had to work for 160 years to match Ellison's $706 million.

The average CEO of a major corporation made $11 million in 2001, including
salary, bonus and
other compensation such as exercised stock options. That�s more than
$33,000 seven days a
week, in a year when the economy tanked.

CEOs made about 565 times as much as security guards, 445 times as much as
emergency
medical technicians and paramedics, 442 times as much as secretaries, 312
times as much
 as firefighters and 271 times as much as police officers.

Back in 1960, CEOs made an average 38 times more than schoolteachers,
according to
Business Week. By 1990, CEOs made 63 times as much. In 2001, CEOs made 264
times as
much as public school teachers.

The Census Bureau recently analyzed what people could expect to earn, on
average (adjusted
to 1999 dollars), during a hypothetical 40-year working life at full-time
jobs. College graduates
could expect $2.1 million and high school graduates $1.2 million.

Workers with a professional degree, such as doctors and lawyers, could
expect to earn $4.4
million during their working life--not even half what CEOs make in just a
year.

While CEO pay spiralled out of control, worker pay was largely stagnant for
decades. Average
hourly earnings for production workers in 2001 were 9 percent lower than
their 1973 peak,
adjusting for inflation.

If workers' wages had kept pace with productivity gains since 1979, average
hourly earnings
would have been $21.71 last year, not $14.33.

This Labor Day, workers need rescue. Congress should start by raising the
minimum wage,
               which would help boost the stagnant pay of average workers
as well.

It takes more than three jobs at the minimum wage of $5.15 an hour--$10,712
a year--to support
a family. The real value of the minimum wage peaked in 1968 at $8.28 per
hour (in 2002
dollars). Today's minimum wage workers earn 38 percent less.

Members of Congress made 9 times as much as minimum wage workers in 1968
and 14 times
as much today. In 1997, when the minimum wage was last raised, to $5.15 an
hour, members
of Congress earned $133,600. Since then, they've increased their pay by
$16,400--much more
than minimum wage workers earn in a year. Unless the Senate blocks it,
Congressional pay
               will rise from $150,000 now to $155,000 in January 2003.

Congress should forgo another pay hike until the minimum wage has been
raised enough to
bring it back to the 9-to-1 ratio that prevailed in 1968. That would help
Congress become more
representative of low-and middle-income Americans and less representative
of the swindling
CEOs who pretended what was good for them was good for the country.

Holly Sklar is coauthor of "Raise the Floor: Wages and Policies That Work
for All Of Us"
(www.raisethefloor.com). She can be reached at [EMAIL PROTECTED] and Box 1045,
Boston, MA
               02130.
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