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October 28th, 2003, 10:49 AM
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Major
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Re: OT: Public referrendums on destroying evil companies
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October 28th, 2003, 11:48 AM
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First Lieutenant
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Re: OT: Public referrendums on destroying evil companies
I agree with Mephisto. Corporations have separate legal personality to individuals and, to reflect that nature, are governed by a completely different set of legal obligations than those that apply to individuals.
I was not suggesting that they should have the same rights as individuals, simply that they must have separate legal personality in order for any rights empowered by law to be able to be enforced against them.
As to whether or not corporations should always act in a beneficial manner, I consider that this is a naive view. Corporations act for one purpose, to make profits in order to realise value for their shareholders. As to how they make those profits is a matter driven by market forces and business opportunities.
If you dont like the way a corporation does business, then as an individual, you only really have one method to show that dislike - dont buy their products. You have certain more rights if you are a shareholder, but practically, you will hold too few shares to make any real differences.
The only other option is lobbying in its many forms.
Failing this, you must exercise your franchise as a voter in order to put pressure on governments to police corporations.
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October 28th, 2003, 01:29 PM
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Major
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Re: OT: Public referrendums on destroying evil companies
Baron Munchausen,
Here's a peace offering, my idea of a specific, clear and legitimate grievance against how many corporations operate, excerpted from the 17th October 2003 issue of The Economist. The issue concerns the wage inflation of bosses of corporations.
Quote:
One of the first things that the Motorola search committee did was to follow the standard procedure of selecting a recruitment consultant to help them - in their case, the well-established firm of Spencer Stuart. To determine what a new CEO's salary should be, consultants make use of benchmarks. For Tenet Healthcare's new boss, for example, the comparison was with "compensation levels and opportunities made available to executives at the company's peer companies".
This has the effect of continually ratcheting up bosses' pay. No selection committee wants to award their new choice less than the industry average. That will, they feel, not attract the best man to the job, and it will also suggest that their company has settled for someone less than average. Since the tenure of top bosses is getting shorter and shorter, this ratcheting effect is accelerating, especially in Europe where, according to a recent report from consultants at Booz Allen Hamilton, the turnover of top CEOs has almost tripled since 1995.
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October 28th, 2003, 01:42 PM
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First Lieutenant
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Re: OT: Public referrendums on destroying evil companies
Ahh, if this discussion is more focussed on fat cat's pay, then I believe we are on firmer ground.
The sad thing is that the only people who can really do anything to curb extoritionate director's pay are the shareholders of the corporation, or a direct regulatory body such as the Stock Exchange.
Governments have tried to legislate (as the Blair government is trying to do at the moment, primarily in relation to privatised utility companies) but currently, nothing is progressing.
The allies here though are the large investment funds into which most of our pension monies are invested. These generally hold large slugs of public companies' equities and therefore, directors really have to listen to fund managers if they have an objection. This approach appears to be polarising and I think we will see a lot more direct shareholder action to stop excessive pay awards..
The UK is bad enough, but when you see what the CEO's of US companies pay themselves!!!!!
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October 28th, 2003, 04:42 PM
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Private
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Join Date: Jun 2003
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Re: OT: Public referrendums on destroying evil companies
A large part of executive pay comes from stock options, right? At least, during the stock boom of the late 90s options were the bulk of executive compensation plans. The idea being, that a profitable company = a sucsessful company. Of course, the American way is to hire a team of lawyers to analyze the rules and systems and find the best ways to exploit them, so stock options eventually started leading to companies taking drastic short cuts, using creative accounting practices, selling unsafe products, and shredding the evedince of these activities. Taking illegal shortcuts raises corporate profits, thereby raising stock prices and executive pay. So maybe doing away with stock options as compensation would have a positive effect on corporate behavior. Just my 2 cents worth of rant.
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October 28th, 2003, 04:50 PM
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First Lieutenant
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Re: OT: Public referrendums on destroying evil companies
Macjimmy, you are quite right that option schemes, and phantom option schemes, used to be a fair percentage of director's remunerations.
This is less the case these days, where the bulk of remuneration packages come from guaranteed bonueses irrespective of whether or not the company performs.
It sometimes seems that the rationale is
Success should be rewarded
Failure should be compensated!
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October 28th, 2003, 05:02 PM
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Private
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Re: OT: Public referrendums on destroying evil companies
I don't understand the reasoning for options then, and bonuses now. Why not just pay executives a larger salary than everyone else? I know they already do get larger salaries than average employees, but then it is combined with all of this doublespeak for money. Just increase their salaries. And while I'm here, what about the practice of creating offshore accounts to evade income taxes? I am under the impression that this is a fairly common practice among larger corporations and richer individuals who can afford accountants and lawyers to set up things like this. I remember when Enron & pals were big in the news that there was some talk about trying to fix it, but like the rest of corporate reform, it has been drowned out in the flood of news from Iraq, Afganistan, and Kobe Bryant.
Ahhh, someone shut me up
[ October 28, 2003, 15:03: Message edited by: macjimmy ]
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October 28th, 2003, 06:05 PM
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First Lieutenant
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Re: OT: Public referrendums on destroying evil companies
Macjimmy, the clever executive will get a salary, but benchmarked at a level that hopefully wont upset the shareholders too much.
He will then get bonuses, discretionary and non-discretionary.
He will also get pension contributions.
Add then stock options and some sexy advanced payment mechanism to get money paid offshore to avoid taxes as a "sweetener" and then your average board chappie is wealthier than Croesus
Oh, and the clever ones negotiate golden handshakes and golden parachutes, so it makes it damn expensive to get rid of them.
Eg head of AstraZeneca in England, sack him? no worries, but that will be �38,000,000 please
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October 28th, 2003, 06:24 PM
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Shrapnel Fanatic
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Re: OT: Public referrendums on destroying evil companies
poverty isn't so much of a virtue as it's hard to be tempted to be arrogant about your wealth when you don't have any.
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October 30th, 2003, 04:01 AM
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First Lieutenant
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Join Date: Sep 2000
Location: Texas
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Re: OT: Public referrendums on destroying evil companies
Hate to bring this topic to the top again... but in regards to GATOR and installing even when you say no. I just ran into that when I downloaded a DivX Codec. It popped up twice asking if I accepted the Gator install and Gator EULA. I said no. The Codec installed. I run a program that uses the Codec and... My firewall pops up asking if I want to allow a program titled Gain to connect to a website with Gator in the URL. I say block all connections from said application.
I ran Adaware. And... 29 Gator files, 2 Gator regkeys, 2 Gator Regvalues, 1 Gator Process.
So it seems that in at least a few cases, though probably not all. Gator will install even if you say no. And if they are willing to do that then they are probably willing to install without asking at all.
Now THAT fits my description of a sleazy company. Both Gator and the one allowing it to run in their software/downloads in such a misleading way.
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