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CEOs made 299 times more than their average workers last year

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New York (CNN Business)The difference between CEO and median employee pay grew in 2020 despite the Covid pandemic and ongoing relief efforts.

The average S&P 500 company CEO made 299 times the average worker’s salary last year, according to AFL-CIO’s annual Executive Paywatch report. Executives received $15.5 million in total compensation on average, marking an increase of more than $260,000 over the past decade. At the same time, the average production and nonsupervisory worker in 2020 earned $43,512, up just $957 a year over the past decade.The highest-compensated CEO in 2020 was Chad Richison of Paycom (PAYC), who received more than $200 million in salary and stock awards that vest over time. Other companies with executives topping the list of highest-paid CEOs include General Electric (GE), Regeneron Pharmaceuticals (REGN), Hilton (HLT), T-Mobile (TMUS), Nike (NKE), Microsoft (MSFT) and Netflix (NFLX).

    The most skewed pay scale belonged to Aptiv (APTV), which had a 5,294:1 CEO-to-worker pay ratio last year. While the company’s CEO, Kevin Clark, was compensated with more than $31 million in 2020, its median employee pay was $5,906.

      Other companies topping that list include The Gap (GPS), Paycom, Chipotle (CMG), Hilton, Nike and Coca-Cola (KO).Read More

      An ongoing conversation

      The difference between executives’ pay compared to other workers at big corporations has been of growing interest since the 2008 recession, when federal officials mandated that companies publicly disclose that data.At the start of the coronavirus pandemic last year, many CEOs and top executives announced they would be taking a pay cut or foregoing their salaries altogether. At big corporations, the move to give up some pay wasn’t enough to engender drastic improvements for lower-paid employees or make up for pandemic losses, but it was symbolic and necessary to show workers that executives were impacted by the crisis, too.Giving up pay might not have meant big losses for executives either though. Base pay is only a fraction of an executive’s total compensation, which is usually comprised of performance-based compensation such as stocks, options and bonuses.For example, while the average CEO salary at S&P 500 companies was a little more than $1 million, performance-based compensation accounted for an additional $14 million, bringing the average total compensation to more than $15 million last year.

      The context

      The growing difference between CEO and worker pay comes after a year of economic turmoil and in the midst of a recovering economy.Last month the US economy added 850,000 jobs, a figure that exceeded expectations and signaled that job growth is accelerating. Still, the labor market is down 6.8 million jobs since February 2020, and 6.2 million people didn’t work or worked less because their employer was impacted by the pandemic, according to the report.Jobless rates for demographic groups also show that the pandemic’s economic hardships are still mostly shouldered by low-income workers and non-White workers.

        At the same time, America is grappling with record-breaking inflation. The consumer price index, a key inflation measure, grew 0.9% in June, the largest one-month increase in 13 years. Over the past year, prices were up 5.4%, the biggest jump in annual inflation in nearly 13 years. The trend is squeezing consumer’s as they struggle to keep up with rising prices, especially gas and food prices. And, like job growth and inflation, the stock market is hitting record-breaking highs, too. Wall Street’s biggest banks are reporting earnings in the billions and a slew of high-profile companies have already made their public debut this year.

        Source: edition.cnn.com

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