Title: What constitutes a corporate class
1- What constitutes a corporate class?
2Interlocking Directorate -- 5 functions
- More Positions on Corporate Boards
- More likely to be board members of huge
corporations - Represent banking and insurance interests
- Elite Social club membership
- Represent corp. interests in other institutions
(Universities, Foundation, Government)
3Big Business?
- Interlocking Directorates are a major means of
communication among the power elite - At the center of corporate cliques are big banks
Citi, Bank America, Chase, Chemical, Sallie
These surround themselves with clusters of
corporations through interlocks (Kerbo 2004)
4Power to impact policies that benefit the
Corporate Class
- Senate Committee on Governmental Affairs
- 13 of the top 130 corporations had ties with 70
percent of the other 117 corporations via 240
Direct and 5,547 Indirect Interlocking
Directorates (indirect when two or more
corporations are tied by their board members
through a 3rd)
5Financial Hegemony
6- Over 70 of assets of the 200,000 Corporations in
America are held by 100 of them or .0005...... - Concentration of Power? So What?
- If one falls they all fall. Thus, U.S. backed
low interest loans, relaxed regulations,
protective litigation, and taxes loopholes
(Wealthfare) - Example International Medical Centers
Borrowed 360 million from U.S. Govt. and then
filed bankruptcy the same year.
7Example of Who Owns What? GE owns NBC
- WVTM, KXAS, WMAQ, WCMH, WVIT, KNBC, WTVJ, WNBC,
WCAU, WJAR, WNCN, KNSD, WRC, KNTV - TELEVISION STATIONS
- CABLE BRAVO, CNBC, MSNBC (that would be
Microsoft), NBC DIGITAL MEDIA,
- GE aircraft engines
- GE commercial finance
- GE consumer products
- GE insurance
- GE medical systems
- GE plastics
- GE power systems
- GE specialty materials
- GE transportation systems
8GE Interlocking Board Memberswith
- Allied Signal, American Stores, Anheuser Busch,
Baxter International, Bristol-Myers Squibb (3nd
largest donor to the Bush campaign), Champion
International, Chase Manhattan, Chubb, Citicorp
(7th largest donor to Bush), Exxon (largest donor
to Bush), Goodyear, J.P. Morgan, Kellog, Kimberly
Corp., Mellon Foundation, PepsiCo, Phillip
Morris, etc. (about 20 more major corps)
9Who Owns What? Westinghouseowns CBS and
interlocks with
- Aetna Life, BDM International, Ashland, Banc One
Corp, Bell Atlantic, Campbell Soup, Cardinal
Health, Chase Manhattan, Dell, Dow Jones and
Duracell International, General Dynamics,
Harcourt, Kaman Corp, MBIA Inc, Rockwell
International, Quaker Oats, Prudential Life,
Wal-mart, etc.
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11Policy Formation Groups
- Setting where Corporate Execs can familiarize
themselves with general policy issues - A place for Conservative and Ultra conservatives
to fight it out - Informal Training ground for new leaders
- Informal recruiting ground for hand picking
academic experts for government service
12Council on Foreign RelationsCFR
- 37 of the top 500 Corporations have at least 1
officer or director who has served as members of
CFR - Of the top 100, 70 had at least one member
- 20 of the top 25 Banks and 16 of the top
Insurance companies had members
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14- Dr. Phil - Hows that working for you?
- CEO Not bad!!!!
15Wage inequality
- ..has been increasing, in part, because of the
declining real value of the minimum wage.
16For minimum wage workersworking poor
- The value of the minimum wage has not kept up
with inflation. When adjusted for inflation, the
value of the minimum wage is 21 lower than it
was in 1979. - http//www.osjspm.org/101_wages.htm1
17Real Value of Minimum Wage (2000 dollars)
18Incomes of the Wealthiest
19Average CEO Salary 2005 10,982,000Average
Worker Pay 2005 41,861
Ratio 262 to 1
20- Put another way, the average worker -- who earned
41,861 in 2005 -- made about 400 less last year
than what the average large-company CEO made in
one day. That assumes 260 days of pay (52 weeks x
5 days a week).
21CEO salaries increased by 1,884
- Does Corporate pay increase equal corporate
profits?
22- This changecontrasted with the 35 percent
decline in corporate profits, 13 percent drop in
Standard Poor's 500 stock prices and 35 percent
increase in the number of unemployed
workersstarkly illustrates the dangerous and
still-growing disconnect between pay and
performance.
23CEO Pay Grew While Profits, Stocks Declined
NYTIMES
24- Salary 2006 2,000,000
- Compensation Package 15,598,383
- Company Net Income Loss
- 697.6 Million
Dwight Schar Chairman NVR Inc.
25- Salary 2006 7,381,605
- Compensation Package 1,528,846
- Company Net Income Loss
- 872.8.6 Million
William Walton Chairman/CEO Allied Capital Corp
26- Former CEO
- Douglas McCorkindale
- Salary 2006 12,836,899
- Compensation Package 1,600,000
- Company Net Income Loss
- 1.2 Billion
27- Salary 2006 1,3000,000
- Compensation Package 17,683,972
- Company Net Income Loss
- 1.5 Billion
Nicholas Chabraja Chairman/CEO General Dynamics
Source Washington Post
28CEOs get boot, take big check with them.
ADG/G8 11/5/06
- More CEOs getting fired but its so hard to fire
for cause because of law loopholes. - Corporations are now paying CEOs to
- leave quietly and theyre taking huge severance
packages with them. - Example Michael Ovitz fired by Michael Eisner
took with him a 140 million exit package
29- In 2006 CFO turnover increased 23 from 2005
- Average CFO tenure is 4.5 years
- More scrutiny. ADG 4/1/07
30Meanwhile. Whats happening to American Workers
- What are your chances of moving up the social
mobility ladder?
31Social Mobility????..
- Top 20
- earn half the income of the United States
- Note
- Investment incomes are not taxed at the same rate
as incomes. And many of our nations wealthiest
earn their keep via investment incomes.
32Wealth Says even more
- Top 1 percent own 42 of wealth
- About 6 trillion
- (90 of Americans combined own 5 trillion)
33Asset Poverty
- The poorest 40 owned 0.2 percent of all
national wealth. - The bottom 20 had a negative net worth - they
owed more than they owned.
34In other words..
- Top 10 own 72 percent of the wealth
- Control over 80 of Corporations
-
- Bottom 90 own 28 percent
- Control less than 20 percent of Corporations
35- Wealth, Income and Corporate Control
- Equals
- Power