Fruits of workers' labor ? Alienation of them from it ?

CB

^^^^^^^^^


Bringing Overpaid Executives to Heel

Power, not productivity, determines earnings. That's
why new laws are needed to check the unfair
distribution of the fruits of workers' labors.

Opinion

By Moshe Adler
The Los Angeles Times
January 4, 2010
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-oe-adler4-2010jan04,0,7694112.story

A recent Time magazine poll found that 71% of Americans
who responded want the government to place limits on
the executive compensation at firms that received
bailout money. Yet accomplishing this task selectively
is impossible to do.

The government did appoint a czar of executive
compensation for these corporations, but he approved a
$7-million salary/$3.5-million bonus plan for the head
of AIG, 80% of which is now owned by taxpayers. Few
workers, executives included, would agree to work for
less than the going rate. Executives are simply used to
earning millions of dollars, and there is little that
either the czar or shareholders can do about it unless
Congress limits all executive compensation. But the
chance of such legislation passing is slim.

Why is limiting executive compensation so difficult?
Because executives have a seemingly unassailable
argument -- market forces -- that University of Chicago
professor Steven Kaplan defended in an October debate:
"Market forces govern CEO compensation. CEOs are paid
what they are worth."

Of course, market forces are cited not only to justify
outsized compensation for executives but also poverty
wages for workers. Textbooks claim that minimum wage
laws and union wages create unemployment. Just what are
these market forces, and should we let them determine
executive compensation and wages?

When British economists David Ricardo and Adam Smith
examined this question 200 years ago, they concluded
that what a person earns is determined not by what the
person has produced but by that person's bargaining
power. Why? Because production is typically carried out
by teams of workers, managers and machines, and the
contribution of each member cannot be separated from
that of the rest. A driver and a bus, for example,
generate $100,000 of income a year. The driver is paid
$25,000. Is this because the driver had transported 10
of the passengers without the bus while the bus had
transported 30 of the passengers without the driver?
The driver's pay is so small only because the driver is
so weak at the bargaining table.

It was Smith who explained that the bargaining power of
each party is determined by the laws that the
government passes and the way that it enforces them,
and that, as a rule, the government sides with
employers against employees. He was particularly
concerned with anti-unionization laws. Had he witnessed
the largesse that boards of directors are permitted to
offer executives, and the government's behavior toward
executives in the current crisis, he probably would
have added that the government also sides with
executives against shareholders and taxpayers.

Despite the logic of Ricardo and Smith's explanation
that it is power, not productivity, that determines
what people earn, the notion that people earn what they
"deserve" persists. It dates to the Haymarket riot of
1886 in Chicago -- in which police and labor protesters
clashed and several policemen and demonstrators were
killed -- and the labor unrest that followed. Concerned
about this unrest, John Bates Clark, a Columbia
University professor, warned in an 1899 book: "The
indictment that hangs over society is that of
'exploiting labor.' If this charge were proved, every
right-minded man should become a socialist."

It was thus with a clear political agenda that Clark
took it upon himself to prove that the charge of
exploitation of workers was dead wrong. Clark's "proof"
was to ignore the fact that production is carried out
by teams and that individual contributions cannot be
measured. He simply declared that the contribution of
each individual worker and each machine could be
measured, and that the earnings of either workers and
executives or machines are simply the values of these
contributions.

In this view, if the government were to raise wages by
law, employers would have no choice but to fire
workers, because no employer can pay out more than the
worker puts in. And if the government were to set
limits on executive compensation, the bright and the
talented would choose to work less or limit the level
of their performance.

Evidence that Clark's theory is wrong -- that
production is carried out by teams and that
astronomical compensation is not a requirement for good
performance -- can be found everywhere. In 1941,
Wassily Leontief, a Nobel Prize-winning economist,
tried to alert economists to the fallacy of Clark's
theory. But Leontief, like Ricardo and Smith, was
ignored. And Clark's tale that earnings are determined
by productivity alone is still being taught around the
globe.

Corporate executives take a different approach: picking
the argument that suits them. When it comes to their
workers' wages, Clark's theory rules: The wage of each
worker is equal to the value of his or her product, and
raising wages will cause unemployment. When it comes to
the executives' own compensation, however, they hide
behind the idea that an individual's contribution can't
be measured. So even when the corporations they run
lose big and their stocks decline, they still collect
millions in pay. Executive compensation is now so large
that executives' work effort no longer has any relation
to the level of their compensation.

Adam Smith got it right: The remedy for the rule of
power is the rule of law. We need new laws to check the
unfair distribution of the fruits of our labor. One
such law could set a maximum ratio at any given company
between the highest executive compensation and the
lowest worker's wage. Another could set a minimum ratio
for the division of income between labor and
shareholders. Still another could raise the minimum
wage and tie it to the median wage, which would make
the minimum wage a consistent living wage.

Overpaid executives take more than their fair share and
leave too little for the rest of us, threatening our
health -- and that of society.

Moshe Adler teaches economics at Columbia University
and is the author of "Economics for the Rest of Us:
Debunking the Science That Makes Life Dismal."

Copyright © 2010, The Los Angeles Times
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