The average employee in the US will have to work 331 years to earn
the annual salary of an average Fortune 500 CEO, according to the
AFL-CIO’s 2013 Executive Paywatch.
The ratio of CEO pay to worker pay has increased by more than 500 percent in the last
thirty years. In 1983, the average CEO made 46 times the average
worker's pay packet. The ratio quadrupled through the decade to
195 times in 1993. Highly paid CEOs of companies employing low
wage earners are fueling economic inequality, which continues to grow.
The CEO salary data was sourced from the US Securities and
Exchange Commission (SEC) and the US Bureau of Labor Statistics
(BLS) data for the latest fiscal years, covering around 3,000
corporations, most listed in the Russell 3000 Index.
America is considered to be the land of opportunity, however in
recent decades, corporate CEOs have been taking a greater share
of the economic pie. The wage of chief executives is constantly
growing, while the salary of the average worker has stagnated and
unemployment remains high.
A separate study
by Equilar for AP, says that the typical CEO now makes 257 times
the average worker's salary, soaring from 181 times in 2009.
Moreover the average employee experienced a 1.3 percent salary
rise in 2013 against 8.8 percent of an employer. The study based
on 337 companies’ data, showed that the median pay package of top
US CEOs in 2013 has hit $10.5 million.
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