Meanwhile, a report by the Economic Policy Institute found that chief executives, flush with stock options, are making out like bandits. Last year, when stock options were taken into account, the chiefs at the 350 largest U.S. companies received an average of $18.9 million for their services, a nearly 18 percent increase over the previous year, and 72 percent since 2009. Nice work if you can get it.
Washington Post
August 27, 2018
Considering that the Economic Policy Institute estimates that average CEO pay is 271 times the nearly $58,000 annual average pay of the typical American worker, we should hold the C-Suite to a higher personal maintenance standard.
Thrive Global
August 27, 2018
According to the Economic Policy Institute’s cost-of-living calculator, the modern version of my dad wouldn’t do so well in the relatively low-cost Simi Valley area. The area is part of the Oxnard-Thousand Oaks-Ventura metro area, where a basket of necessities—that includes the price of fair-market housing, food, childcare, transportation, health care and other core costs—for a family of five is calculated at $11,131 per month. So for a family like ours to attain what the EPI describes as a “modest but adequate standard of living” that is a realistic “measure of economic security in America” in 2017, it would need to earn about $133,600 per year.
Fast Company
August 27, 2018
Family Promise of Forsyth County takes what it calls a “community-based approach” to the situation, partnering with local churches to house families for a week at a time. They provide a place to eat, shower and sleep. They help parents find more consistent or improved work, sometimes tweaking resumes or conducting practice interviews. They find childcare and sometimes provide transportation. Anything to help struggling families in a county that is the second-priciest place to live in Georgia, according to a study by the Economic Policy Institute released this past March.
Forsynth County News
August 27, 2018
EPI ROLLS OUT POLICY PLAN: The left-leaning Economic Policy Institute released today a new policy agenda premised on the idea that employment rules are “rigged against working people from their first day on the job.” The agenda calls for an easier path to join a union, a ban on “right to work” laws, a higher minimum wage, and access to paid sick leave, among other demands. “Importantly, this is a practical agenda that progressive candidates could run on and a progressive Congress could pass on Day 1,” the group said in a related announcement. Read the plan here.
Politico Pro
August 22, 2018
EPI TO FED: DON’T RAISE RATES: The Federal Reserve should refrain from hiking interest rates, the left-leaning Economic Policy Institute’s Josh Bivens and Ben Zipperer argue in a report released this morning. The pair contend the status quo will drive down unemployment and increase upward pressure on wages. “An extended period of low unemployment — sometimes called a ‘high-pressure labor market’ — could deliver large benefits by boosting wages and healing the economic damage done by the Great Recession and the slow recovery following it,” Bivens and Zipperer write. More from EPI here.
Politico Pro
August 21, 2018
It pays to run a big company. Even in 1965, CEOs of the largest U.S. firms were pulling in an average of $902,000 a year (in 2017 dollars) and, since then, their compensation has skyrocketed. According to a new report from the left-leaning Economic Policy Institute(EPI), CEO pay peaked in 2000 at $21 million a year (in 2017 dollars). In 2017, CEOs in America’s largest firms made an average of $18.9 million in compensation, or 312 times the annual average pay of the typical worker. That’s “5.5 times as much as the average earner in the top 0.1 percent,” the report notes. (whole story)
CNBC
August 21, 2018
Executive compensation has soared about 1,000 percent since 1978, while real wages for most Americans are up about 11 percent, according to an Aug. 16 report from the Economic Policy Institute. Putting a number to that differential was expected to cause outraged headlines and trigger criticism from investors and consumers on social media. Human resource chiefs, meanwhile, worried the disclosures would sow discontent among the rank and file, particularly those paid even less than the median.
Bloomberg
August 21, 2018
in contrast, although Pittsburgh has multiple universities, it hasn’t been able to hold onto these graduates, the study noted. And according to the Economic Policy Institute, there is a lot of income inequality even within coastal states like Connecticut, Florida and New York.
CBS Moneywatch
August 21, 2018
Along with this drop in personal income has come an increase in income inequality. At the end of July, the Economic Policy Institute produced a report that showed an income divide that had come to resemble the Cumberland Gap. From WVXU: Income for the wealthiest one percent of earners in Kentucky was more than $719,012 in 2015, compared to an average income of almost $39,990 for all other Kentuckians. The report from the Economic Policy Institute shows from 2009 to 2015 the top one percent income grew 23.2 percent while everyone else’s income grew only 7.2 percent. Ashley Spalding is a senior policy analyst with the Kentucky Center for Economic Policy. “The growth in income inequality is the result of policy decisions that have reduced union density and eroded the value of the minimum wage and other baseline labor standards,” Spalding said.
Esquire
August 21, 2018