C
consumedconvert
Guest
Here’s a novel idea culled straight (more or less) from Distributist theory:
Would it be morally superior to cap the total compensation of CEOs and other top execs? Say, to $1 mil annually?
Consider the modern delimma. We here time and again of companies losing money, laying of workers, and CEOs getting multi-million dollar bonuses. If you capped total compensation and required any excess income to be either donated to a charity of one’s choice, re-invested in the company, or used for a government program of your choice, everyone (except the CEO) would benefit. Charities would see a big boost; the government would receive a slight increase in income; shareholders would benefit; employees would work in a much more equitable situation; and in any case, no one would be laid off to pay for the bosses’ new beachfront houses. And I think, after considerable self-sacrifice, corporate-types could learn to live with $1 mil a year
What do you think?
Would it be morally superior to cap the total compensation of CEOs and other top execs? Say, to $1 mil annually?
Consider the modern delimma. We here time and again of companies losing money, laying of workers, and CEOs getting multi-million dollar bonuses. If you capped total compensation and required any excess income to be either donated to a charity of one’s choice, re-invested in the company, or used for a government program of your choice, everyone (except the CEO) would benefit. Charities would see a big boost; the government would receive a slight increase in income; shareholders would benefit; employees would work in a much more equitable situation; and in any case, no one would be laid off to pay for the bosses’ new beachfront houses. And I think, after considerable self-sacrifice, corporate-types could learn to live with $1 mil a year
What do you think?