Why Companies Fear Disclosing CEO-to-Workers Pay
Who’s counting?
Photographer: Getty ImagesU.S. companies must soon begin disclosing what many would rather keep secret: The ratio between the CEO’s compensation and the paycheck of the company’s median worker. The mandate was included in the 2010 Dodd-Frank Act to shed light on the growing income gap between executives and workers. Opponents say it’s only meant to embarrass executives and won’t be useful to investors. One critic called it an example of "bigotry against the successful."
The disclosures will provide a first-ever glimpse into how thousands of U.S. companies compensate their workers, plus a more accurate sense than ever before of the CEO-to-worker pay gap. According to the AFL-CIO, the average S&P 500 chief executive officer got $13.1 million in 2016, compared with about $37,000 for the average worker, a 347-to-1 ratio. The worker figure in that calculation is based on Bureau of Labor Statistics national sampling data; now, such ratios will be based on actual company payrolls.