A MINORITY VIEW
BY WALTER E.
WILLIAMS
RELEASE:
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 2, 2008, AND THEREAFTER
Greed, Need and
Money
Demagoguery
about greedy rich people or greedy corporate executives being paid 100 or 200
times their workers' salaries is a key weapon in the politics of envy. Let's talk about
greed, starting off with Merriam-Webster's definition: "a selfish and
excessive desire for more of something (as money) than is needed."
That definition
is a bit worrisome because how does one know what a person really needs? It's
something my economics students and I spend a bit of time on in the first
lecture. For example, does a family really need one, two, three or four
telephones? What about a dishwasher or a microwave oven? Are these excessive
desires? If you say
these goods are really needed, then I ask, how in the world did your
great-grandmother and possibly your grandmother, not to mention most of today's
world population, make it without telephones, dishwashers and microwave ovens?
"Need" is a nice emotional
term, but analytically, it is vacuous.
"Selfish"
is a bit more useful term, and it's the human motivation that gets wonderful
things done. For example, I think it's wonderful that Alaskan king crab
fishermen take the time and effort, often risking their lives in the cold Bering Sea, to catch
king crabs that I enjoy. Do you think they make that sacrifice because they
care about me? I'm betting they don't give a hoot about me. They make it
possible for me to enjoy king crab legs because they want more money for
themselves. How much king crab would I, and millions of others, enjoy if it all
depended on human love and kindness?
What about
complaints about CEOs earning so much more than the average worker? Before
looking at CEOs, let's look at another area of
huge pay differences. According to Forbes' Celebrity 100 list, Oprah Winfrey
earned $260 million. Even if her makeup person or cameraman earned $100,000,
she earns thousands of times what they earn. Among the celebrities earning
hundreds or thousands of times
more than the people who work with them are: Steven Spielberg ($110 million),
Tiger Woods ($100 million), Jay Leno ($32 million) and Dr. Phil ($30 million). According to
Forbes, the top 10 celebrities and athletes earned an average of $116 million
in 2004
compared to an average of $59 million earned by the top 10 corporate CEOs.
When Jack Welch
became General Electric's CEO in 1981, the company was worth about $14 billion.
Through hiring and firing, buying and selling decisions, Welch turned the company around and
when he retired 20 years later, GE was worth nearly $500 billion. What's a CEO
worth for such an achievement? If Welch was paid a measly one-half of a percent
of GE's increase in value, his total compensation would have come to nearly $2.5
billion,
instead of the few hundred million that he actually received.
If a corporate
board of directors could buy a $1,000 computer that could do what a CEO does,
it wouldn't pay him millions of dollars. If an NFL owner could hire a computer
to make decisions
that star quarterbacks make, why would he pay some of these guys yearly
compensation packages worth more than $10 million? If just anybody could have
played the lead role in "The Da Vinci Code" and have it earn $758
million at the box office, why would
the film's producers have paid Tom Hanks $74 million?
There's another
important issue: If one company has an effective CEO or a team has a star
quarterback, it is not the only company or team that would like to have him on
the payroll. In order to keep
him, he must be paid enough so that he can't be lured elsewhere.
You say,
"Williams, what about those golden parachutes for failing CEOs?"
Paying a failed CEO, or a spouse in the case of marriage, enough money to go
away quietly might be much cheaper
than litigation.
Walter E.
Williams is a professor of economics at George Mason University. To find out
more about Walter E. Williams and read features by other Creators Syndicate
writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.
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