Alright sickos, point of clarification: we're talking about "top CEOs" in this video, and we want to re-emphasize that. We got a lot of data from the Economic Policy Institute's annual report on executive pay, which focuses on the CEOs of the top 350 publicly traded companies in the U.S. We're talking about the leaders of the biggest and most powerful publicly traded companies in the country here, not about everyone who runs any sort of company-because those folks, of course, are hard-working Americans just trying to sell you a microwaved chicken pot pie to eat before you head over to the couch for some missionary and Monday Night Football.
@GoodWorkMB5 ай бұрын
Here's a link to the 2023 report for those who want to check it out, authored by one of the guests on this episode, Josh Bivens (aka "Josh Bivens"): www.epi.org/publication/ceo-pay-in-2022/
@prod2k_5 ай бұрын
Oil up lil bro
@yizhizhu51545 ай бұрын
Wait, so I can buy microwavable chick pot pie from respectable small local business?
@The_fusion_physics_guy5 ай бұрын
@@GoodWorkMB My couch sucks and is small, not gonna happen chief. But other than that yeah that makes sense
@programmer18405 ай бұрын
You're no better than the people you complain about with your misinformation. Be the change you want to see and be honest and accurate with your reporting, not just pandering to your preconceived idea.
@RyuuBaka5 ай бұрын
Just remember the the CEO of Boeing who has not made a profit in his 5years in the role, has lead the company into multiple huge lawsuits and criminal fines, caused the death of over 300 people through budget and safety cuts, and which has resulted the stock bombing, STILL got a 46% pay increase last year.
@ninetyone91915 ай бұрын
46% raise on a multi-million salary, while the actual hands making the company function get jack
@Anthonybrother4 ай бұрын
@ninetyone9191 Well yeah, that's what you get for thinking the american dream is still attainable. The house of cards is going down
@Sound_Tech4 ай бұрын
@@Anthonybrother Bold of you to assume any of us actually still believe in the "American Dream." It's not the 60s anymore.
@VanessaPark-sf3hz4 ай бұрын
Don't forget he has a separate superannuation as well. the former CEO who was responsible for two crushes got 80M or something as far as I know-- I could be wrong tho, but anyway he got a massive retirement benefit.
@SunnyDallasRealtor3 ай бұрын
Don’t forget the two murders.
@alternateVSNS5 ай бұрын
do you think CEOs would share if we asked nicely
@snowballeffect78125 ай бұрын
Mine didn't. So I quit.
@UnstableYT-u7k5 ай бұрын
Mine did and he told me to quiet 🤫🤐
@alternateVSNS5 ай бұрын
@@snowballeffect7812 good for you ! I hope you find a job that fulfills AND pays you well
@hiiamelecktro49855 ай бұрын
Maybe if we all do it at the same time
@Misfit_noble5 ай бұрын
No we wouldn't unfortunately
@bobowon54505 ай бұрын
the biggest pain here is that a CEOs life barely changes when their compensation goes from 100 million to 200 million. But the average joes life is unbelievably transformed when they go from making 30k per year to 60k per year
@iCore7Gaming4 ай бұрын
And then think how many 30,000 go into 100 million... About 3,333 people could hsve huge improvements.
@thecl0ck304 ай бұрын
@@iCore7Gamingb-b-but socialism bad 🥺
@Llamaguru4 ай бұрын
I think the law of diminishing returns applies to earning more money at the scale CEOs do. Their greed keeps them insatiable and only wanting more while chasing a high that doesn’t hit like it used to, no longer able to understand the word “enough”.
@cartersheley15674 ай бұрын
@@thecl0ck30that’s not even socialism, its just equity.
@creepynutsrl3 ай бұрын
@@thecl0ck30 it is. if a worker was paid 60k from 30k then your mcdonalds burger would cost the double too
@AGuyNamedRicky5 ай бұрын
My dad was a UPS man in the 70’s he told me a story of his coworker who would nickle and dime the company at every chance. He threw a fit about a shift being paid at 10 cents less than the hourly rate. My dad asked why he made such a big deal about 10 cents. He said, “if they take 10 cents a day from me every day that’s $1.20 dollars. What if they took a $1.20 from every employee in the company? That day? Who would even notice? And if you don’t notice they won’t give it back.”
@trashmann12934 ай бұрын
Oh no they took a dollar! Get real, wage theft is a lie perpetuated by the left. No sane business person actually dose that. Sorry to say, but your dad lied to you.
@tubester3584 ай бұрын
This is what happens in countries like the Sudan and people make the same argument when you bring attention to it, despite it being very clearly forbidden by the main belief systems. People in charge take the small change from employee salaries or other forms of remuneration and treat it like a tip that's just expected for a gov employee to do their job, but many accept it coz at least they're doing the job when they can freely just not do it if they don't feel like it (i.e. when they're not getting generously "tipped"). Same thing happens with most construction or social projects with much of the funds going into personal accounts. When it's not stopped early it becomes a norm and deep-rooted into how the economy is structured, you begin to be forced to do the same thing to succeed and not complain about economic issues when you're not hustling as much as the other scammer are. The national dream is literally to be an unqualified manager hired through nepotism and getting overpaid lol.
@boxoffisa2 ай бұрын
@@tubester358I hate nepotism. It’s destroying Uganda to the core.
@RussOlson-pl3kf21 күн бұрын
It's like the reverse of Office Space
@BryanBilly6916 күн бұрын
The problem we have is because Most people always taught that " you only need a good job to become rich " . These billionaires are operating on a whole other playbook that many don't even know exists.
@AustinSean-16 күн бұрын
Money invested is far better than money saved , when you invest it gives you the opportunity to increase your financial worth.
@BrianShannon24116 күн бұрын
The wisest thing that should be on everyone mind currently should be to invest in different streams of income that doesn't depend on government paycheck, especially with the current economic crisis around the world.
@simonmarc3316 күн бұрын
Many individuals report success in investing in stocks,fx, yet I continue to struggle.Can somebody help me out or advise me on what to do?
@AliceJudy06216 күн бұрын
Even with the right technique and assets some investors would still make more than others. As an investor, you should've known that by now that nothing beats experience and that's final. Personally I had to reach out to a stock expert for guidance which is how I was able to grow my account close to $35k, withdraw my profit right before the correction and now I'm buying again.
@ChunAli43216 күн бұрын
The best method for beginners is to practice under the guidance of an expert.
@myfazu3815 ай бұрын
I asked 7 CEOs what's the secret to your success? , and they all said the same thing: How did you get in my house?
@LuisSierra425 ай бұрын
coincidence? I think not
@btbrotherton5 ай бұрын
Interesting. How do we capitalize on this, "how did you get in my house?" strategy?
@azpont72755 ай бұрын
You are definitely not a working class hero if they all lived to tell the tale. Aren’t you getting inspired by the amazing achievements of Boeing’s employee of the year, Agent 47?
@AYVYN5 ай бұрын
Rookie mistake. I brought them to my own property out of courtesy, and even got a reward afterwards
@toyotaprius795 ай бұрын
Comeback: who do you think payed for your house
@gmanley1465 ай бұрын
This new host is devilishly handsome, unlike the regular host Mr. Tooney
@AmiiboDoctor5 ай бұрын
Hopefully they stick with this new one. He's much funnier and has a unique voice.
@LuisSierra425 ай бұрын
He revealed at the end of the video that it was Tooney all along. I was absolutely flabbergasted
@AmiiboDoctor5 ай бұрын
I'm not sure I believe him: techno wizards like Dan and their video editing can make someone believe anything.
@vau_st5 ай бұрын
@@LuisSierra42 If think that's just something they tell us. Like when an actor for a character gets replaced in the cast of a sitcom. They just pretend it's "Dan Toomey" so the illusion is upheld - but we all know
@lizp46155 ай бұрын
@@LuisSierra42 didn't even stay to the big reveal, much less the teaser for the sequel in the end card
@Johnny-fw9xj5 ай бұрын
1. Ask your assistant to hire a team of consultants to do all the work 2. Profit 3. If it goes well, it was your brilliant idea in the first place to ask your assistant to hire a team of consultants 4. Profit 5. If it goes badly, deny any responsibility as it was your incompetent assintant who hired the wrong team of consultants 6. Profit 7. If it goes disastrously bad, accept the severance package 8. M-M-M-M-Monster Profit 9. Apply for another company 10. Repeat step one
@LateNightwithStudBuyers5 ай бұрын
nearly perfect. except 9: applying? pfff, should say pick whichever gluttonous package the next billion dollar company offers. Good Work!
@mamotalemankoe37755 ай бұрын
This is not satire. There are CEOs of large companies who have destroyed every Corp they have worked at but they continue to rise upwards, like Adam Neumann but nowhere near as flamboyant and ridio.
@GameFuMaster5 ай бұрын
@@mamotalemankoe3775 yeah, but that's the fault of the investors/stockholders. They literally have the approve the compensation package in the first place.
@ScaleScarborough-jq8zx5 ай бұрын
What if they should learn of your insubordination?!
@rainbomg5 ай бұрын
@@ScaleScarborough-jq8zxthat requires actual hands on _management_ of the lowly hourly folks and I think most ceos assume these are made up of like, horses and talking farm animals (everyone knows horses can talk, they just _won’t_ )
@C6Z06J5 ай бұрын
CEO of my company is making 1.5 million a year. Plus over 20 million value in our company stock. We got a 1% a year raise averaged from 2016-2024
@keltinmohr76314 ай бұрын
Hmm sounds like we may work at the same fortune 4 company!
@jedensnow10844 ай бұрын
it all has to do with leverage
@creepynutsrl3 ай бұрын
where do you work lol? in most european countries a salary increase of 1% is illegal.
@TheTrueFoolАй бұрын
When I was at Lockheed, our CEO stepped down and received something like $400 million (in stocks I believe).
@kiwitrainguyАй бұрын
It sounds like most of these high compensations are in the form of stock/shares. That's why I won't shed a tear if (what am I talking about? I mean when) the stock market crashes.
@zipkitty5 ай бұрын
If companies are "competing" to get the best and the brightest CEOs, why is mine so old and dumb?
@trepan49445 ай бұрын
Missing the doorhandle at 0:26 was a genius move to throw off potential CEO snipers Dan
notice how not a single CEO sniper got me? yeah. exactly.
@CupGuyDude125 ай бұрын
@@GoodWorkMBwe noticed bucko thought you could slip a fast one by us mr tam doomy with ur eye brows let me guess it was a fake hat too? tim apple sends his regards
@anograsek5 ай бұрын
proof of existence of CEO snipers: kzbin.info/www/bejne/o6GmkJuFZpp8paM
@CEOsniper15 ай бұрын
I'll get you next time, Daniel.
@martti73635 ай бұрын
For all the business folk that actually believe that the “best and brightest” end up in CEO roles, do you actually have any evidence for this? My experience is that it’s really connections, luck (rich family) and (mostly) nepotism that leads to an executive title.
@ChiliCheeseNuggies5 ай бұрын
i still think its so tragic elon bought his way into owning majority in tesla, kicked out the founders, and did everything in his power to make the world believe he was the one and only founder of it
@sportyeight77695 ай бұрын
@@ChiliCheeseNuggies The worst thing he achieves is make people believe he was some kind of genius... We he is in fact, really not a genius at all.
@fordakacar5 ай бұрын
@@ChiliCheeseNuggieswhat’s really tragic is i thought elon founded tesla until today
@patnor73545 ай бұрын
Height
@AirsoftKeksTV5 ай бұрын
@@fordakacar Wait until you find out he has pretty much nothing to do with paypal either 😅
@asimpleguy27305 ай бұрын
I think the real problem of having compensation tied to the stock is not that it doesn't really reflect the performance, it's that it encourage short term gains instead of long term stability
@rainbomg5 ай бұрын
This is the overall decay eating away at our country, at product quality, at small business and the free market, at the environment, our health, and the global economy overall. Everything is set up to maximize _immediate_ *demonstrable* gains, not long term stability. They’ve equated efficiency with quality and it’s not the same thing. They’ve aligned profit and cost cutting with success, also not the same. Every corporate strategy is myopic as hell and this is why: 1. If you’ll notice, nothing really _improves_ (beyond what’s being enforced by laws) it just becomes more sellable, more profitable, requires longer and more frequent access for use. For the most part, especially in tech, products are no longer improving our lives, they are just getting “stickier” and requiring more time spent using them (attention economy: if it’s free, you’re not the customer, you’re the product (advertisers are the customer). If it’s not free, you’re the customer but you’ll only remain a customer if you think it is useful, you’ll only justify the expense if you use the product often enough to feel like it’s worth paying for, not necessarily bc it makes you more productive or improves your work) and more repeat visits TO them. We end up with less free time and more time spent staring at screens for no real increase in quality of life. 2. Assessing capital in a much shorter timeline results in what qualifies as capital being valued differently, we went from commodities with real world real time value (that could be destroyed if the goods are destroyed or go bad) being the most profitable industries to profiting more from promised value, things that represent value: things with the _potential_ to be worth something. With shortening our time to account for what has value, we can only count the immediate make believe “profit” by counting the theoretical numbers involved, not the longer term, real world _value_ being provided. 3. A lot of this shift can be traced back to the CEO of GE circa the 80s, his name was Jack and Alec Baldwin’s 30 rock character was loosely based on him. He started juicing the numbers right before every Quarterly earnings assessment so profit could be seen on paper, even if they weren’t actually making money. He did this by selling real estate, doing massive layoffs, and moving assets around so that every time it counted, shareholders saw gains and the numbers looked good. Now virtually all companies operate this way. It’s just shifting things around to suit some made up evaluation so that the rich stay happy, all the rest of us be damned.
@ArtificialDjDAGX5 ай бұрын
@@rainbomg not just your country. Literally every country with a capitalism-structured economic system, so afaik it's all of them.
@sportyeight77695 ай бұрын
Become CEO of a compagny, Drive output or benefice by sacrificing employees health or just cutting jobs, stocks goes up because you can write a huge (inflated) benefice at the end of the year, quite 2 years after when the compagny is still mostly alive with a huge bonus and another CEO job for another compagny. Repeat. Let the next suckers (that will be blamed) handle the now failing compagny.
@donkeystonky53625 ай бұрын
One example I know of where things aren’t as bad as the US is Japan, because apparently their business philosophy puts much more priority on long term corporate sustainability and small, frequent improvements, rather than the short-sighted US philosophy of only caring about the profits or stock price of that quarter/year
@glennbramd72135 ай бұрын
@@donkeystonky5362Japan also has regulations that make it much harder for a company to do mass layoffs
@Simbabweman5 ай бұрын
What do CEOs do half the time? Ive witnessed a CEO of a massive comoany as she visited our office. She literally is always just doing visits, scripted interviews for the employees to watch later, training video clips and generally just stuff to make her and the company look good but i see almost no actual involvement in the actual company work. Also ceos who are often on trial just cannot say out loud how much they make when theyre asked. Take the Boeing CEO recently, he is asked how much he makes and he says something like "thats well disclosed, you can see it in the proxy documents" so they ask him again what is it? He has the nerve to say "its a big number sir". So they say lemme help you out its $32.8 million does that sound right so he says "yes it does". They love to dodge the answer because you can tell theyre embarrassed to say it because they know its wrong, its too much, they could pay so many more unfairly treated employees, they could pay for so much more equipment and safety technology etc with even half of that salary but they are greedy. He even says it was a 45% increase over last year then they ask him "what is it you get paid to do exactly?" And he says "i get paid to run the boeing company". Like come on! Thats not an answer. No one knows what ceos actually do, i think half the time they just play golf, take days off and then turn up to press events and company meet and greets just to look good meanwhile everyone underneath them does the actual work
@lenardgor4 ай бұрын
I recommend: The lonely Island "Boss" Video. It shows what they do all day.
@Simbabweman4 ай бұрын
@@lenardgor haha an accurate portrayal. On another note Im starting to think CEOs are just scapegoats for boards and execs in a way to divert attention off of them since it's always said that CEOs salaries are agreed by boards etc. I get we need some execs and that but when thinking about bosses it always reminds me of the scene from The Office where the staff are left without a manager for a day and Jim says something like "weirdly, when a manager doesn't come in to the office, everyone just gets on with their job". As long as we have incentives to do a good job, managers and bosses etc are often redundant. Imagine if instead of the managers having their "management" meetings in workplaces all the time, we had the whole team managing themselves and going to meetings together etc. and could actually voice their own opinions instead of managers just trying to fudge their numbers to make their team look good.
@marsh3464 ай бұрын
bro is nine years old
@Simbabweman4 ай бұрын
@@marsh346 um ok? Good...comment?
@kentacy6923 күн бұрын
@@marsh346kinda cringe ngl, 9 year old has more output than you
@GoodWorkMB5 ай бұрын
why hello, early crew. gotta say you look dashing
@gregregation5 ай бұрын
Xoxoxo
@MikeKnops5 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@MikeKnops5 ай бұрын
Gotta say. Love the fedora
@cyberiagenesis5 ай бұрын
2 or 3 lines today?
@WitherhoardHug5 ай бұрын
Thank you sir, and you as well.
@mrharvest5 ай бұрын
3:55 The really scary thought is what if the CEOs of oil companies can affect the global price of oil. They would have a personal interest in starting global wars
@lmaolol93575 ай бұрын
The true sigma grindset
@Swancorner5 ай бұрын
Haha yeah what if that were true that would be crazy haha
@aeoligarlic40245 ай бұрын
They already are behind these global wars. They're actively supplying it
@BlueHawkPictures175 ай бұрын
Unfortunately it exists and its called OPEC, fortunately Americans aren't part of it as much as they would want to.
@NothingXemnas5 ай бұрын
@@Swancorner Haha almost sounds like a conspiracy theory, right? thankfully it would never happen hahah
@sambeawesome5 ай бұрын
Oh what, that was Dan Toomey the entire video? Man, the dude will go above and beyond to give us the scoop. Appreciate the Good Work, Dan, keep it up!
@Imevul5 ай бұрын
Something that's always bothered me as well, is the way that CEOs (and other high value roles) are just circulated around between big companies (not necessarily "top" companies) every few years. Doesn't really matter if they did a good job or not, but they try to maximize shareholder revenue at any and all cost, and when their ways prove to be too unsustainable they move on to be CEO at another company, and a new CEO in a similar situation take their place. Repeat every 3-5 years. And with that in mind, they mostly do things that will look good on paper short-term, like firing workers to reduce costs and bump up share price. What happens in a few years time is a problem for another CEO. There's literally no downside for them to have that mentality either. They both increase their pay, make their time as CEO look good on paper, and then bail before having to deal with the consequences and without having to take any of the blame. Often getting a pay raise in the process. If shit really hits the fan, they just glide their golden parachute over to their next grift and blame the market. Even putting this (and why it feels wrong) into words is difficult. It's like there's a secret club of elites that take care of each other and make sure they all extract as much value for themselves as possible. I mean, considering how many brilliant people exist in the world, it's very unlikely that literally no one could do a better job. Instead, the pool of CEOs is circulated among companies, and access is restricted to those with connections.
@elcapitan61263 ай бұрын
Chomsky talks about this. In particular the rotation among private boards, execs and high political positions. It's a very incestuous society "at the top" of the US and world economy.
@jamesellison6154Ай бұрын
Similar in alot of ways to career politicians; depressing stuff
@kiwitrainguyАй бұрын
"bail before having to deal with the consequences and without having to take any of the blame." - The Russians have a description for this, it's called "Write two letters". When you move in to the high-paying job, you write two letters, one blaming the previous guy for everything that's wrong and another letter addressed to the person who will replace you telling them to write two letters.
@GaviLazan5 ай бұрын
One thing I'm surprised you didn't touch on in the video is that not only is the CEO pay gap unfair to employees and bad for shareholders, but it's also bad for most of the public. Prices of goods and services are going up, and these companies are raising their prices "because they have to", yet somehow are still able to pay millions to their C suite and pay out huge dividends to their shareholders. You can't say that costs are rising and you need to maintain profit margins while also spending millions on bonuses and dividends. Either your CEO isn't doing as great a job (and shouldn't be getting a bonus), or you aren't making as much money as you hoped (and shouldn't be paying out dividends you don't have), or both! Either way, the cost of your product/service shouldn't be going up just because you want another yacht. "oh but inflation!" no! You're the cause for much of the inflation. Not paying your employees livable wages, then also jacking up the costs of your products and services causes inflation.
@jonferrin56943 ай бұрын
That's capitalism in a nutshell. Modern-day feudalism with window dressing that says "you too can be a rich a**hole" F**k CEOs and the Capitalist system they use to line their pockets while screwing over everyone else.
@carlgauss170221 күн бұрын
Yeah, thats the monopolistic mindset. When you are out of options, they charge what they want for the only option.
@TheWarrior9495 ай бұрын
Wow the end card was incredible
@foodiusmaximus5 ай бұрын
About to be introducing babies to cigarettes
@chaquator5 ай бұрын
@@foodiusmaximuswhat
@foodiusmaximus5 ай бұрын
@@chaquator watch the end, there are fake video links.
@fjooyou5 ай бұрын
bet they're gonna feel dumb for doing this skit after youtube get rid of end cards for no reason other than to just change stuff
@funx24X75 ай бұрын
End card appreciation crew unite
@johndowe61615 ай бұрын
Don't forget that the board gets to use the CEO as the fall guy for any illegal or shitty things they do. The CEO doesn't care because they have enough money to retire after working for like 2 minutes
@jacobp82945 ай бұрын
The CEO is just a front-man, they make no decisions offer nothing.
@Unleashed_Beasts3 ай бұрын
@@jacobp8294who's making the decision for corporation then?
@daltonweidman8905 ай бұрын
I am an undergraduate economics student in my third year and although very trivial as I am not an experienced researcher, I wrote my most recent term paper (submitted last night) about the relationship between CEO compensation and firm performance (NOT stock performance) and found little to no connection. Meaning that yes CEO comp packages are wildly oversized and firms (and society) could benefit from a change in the use of resources. Again I am not an economist and I am not claiming to be 100% right I just happened to spend a lot of time on this topic for the last few months.
@homieinthesky89195 ай бұрын
Company stock isnt really a workable recource unless you sell it since its essentially just a piece of paper. Selling it usually just lowers the overal stock prices and many retirment funds and the wealth of employees that get payed in stock. Basically from your explaination your end result is the company itself (the legal entity of the company) just hordes nost of the stock and instead pays the ceo cash and every other employee cash while the few remaining shares are traded on the open market.
@patrickbateman16605 ай бұрын
There's is almost zero connection between low level employee pay and stock performance as well.
@agreatmanlookingtotheright5 ай бұрын
@@patrickbateman1660There is you room temperature IQ. If employee pay is too low nobody works and the company makes no money and stock price goes to 0 quick.
@thyhomelessking5 ай бұрын
Dalton it comes down to sharing with the tribe, investing the hunt into the joyous wellbeing of the tribe.
@derekhettinger4515 ай бұрын
last name: weidman
@CaptainBenjamins5 ай бұрын
Honestly, why do high earning CEOs even want to work anymore. Like once you reached your first $100 million, or even just $10 million why not just retire, spend time with family, travel the world, volunteer at your church or community. Why would you want the stress of sleepless nights to drive a company and its shareholders?
@brampelberg93355 ай бұрын
Probably cause it gives them purpose
@CaptainBenjamins5 ай бұрын
@@brampelberg9335 I feel like there are so many more ways to find purpose, like feeding ducks at the lake
@brampelberg93355 ай бұрын
@@CaptainBenjamins of course, but what people get purpose from can vary widely from individual to individual. And once you find something that gives you purpose, you are not gonna let it go that easily.
@CaptainBenjamins5 ай бұрын
@@brampelberg9335 you are right, we are all human, but doesn’t necessarily mean we are wired the same.
@maksimfedoryak5 ай бұрын
Because our global system doesn't have limit of wealth/capital, that one person can own at the moment 🌝👉👈
@vladsandu97135 ай бұрын
The pay of one CEO is about as much as a new factory or a new research department would cost. There's no way that dude counts for this much. It's all a scam by people who just pay themselves as much as they please.
@TBathory5 ай бұрын
No the people that get hurt are the employees, remember every time the CEO decides to layoff employees so that dividends go up for shareholders AND the CEO makes bank! Its almost never because the layoffs are really needed its because they want the large stock bump!
@bladewolf395 ай бұрын
Way back in the day, layoffs used to be considered an embarassment for the company because it was proof of poor business management on the executive end. But ever since shareholders and CEOs noticed big green line go up when they mass fire people, suddenly, layoffs became a feature of business management rather than a symptom of poor management. Its messed up.
@wotizit5 ай бұрын
@@bladewolf39exactly!
@voidspirit1115 ай бұрын
@@bladewolf39the pandemic and younger more get rich quick investors have made this the viable way of doing business. Pandemic offered good excuses for this and the new investor type just cares about profit right now. They invest like they are going to the cassino...
@MRkriegsАй бұрын
If a company makes more money after they fire u then u dont deserve to hold that position. It's as simple as that
@Otto72ish5 ай бұрын
Great stuff. Pay consultants are a big part of the problem too. Board: "We would only employ a CEO that is one of the best. Therefore we must pay our CEO in line with the best." Consultant: "This is what a top quartile CEO is paid, so you must pay more than that." Rinse, repeat, keep cranking up the averages. (Reality, by definition, most CEOs are about average, and half are below median ability.)
@MrTresto5 ай бұрын
How bout you become a CEO instead then?
@aeoligarlic40245 ай бұрын
These overpaid nothingburger jobs are so annoying
@mrmcawesome97465 ай бұрын
@@MrTresto You're right, let me just be born to a billionaire parent and I'll get right on it.
@evancombs51595 ай бұрын
@@MrTresto becoming a CEO often has more to do with knowing the right people than being competent.
@Oldass_Deadass_dumbass_channel5 ай бұрын
@@MrTrestonepotism: "allow me to introduce myself..."
@ItsSnagret5 ай бұрын
“Socialist Gandalfs” had me dead 💀😂
@mirzaahmed65895 ай бұрын
Also the "Capitalist Gandalf"
@ajiththomas24655 ай бұрын
"The Middle Earth people are tired of Sauron" - Socialist Gandalf.
@captainpoontah48885 ай бұрын
One more point: CEO’s are also typically on boards of other large publicly traded companies. So it’s a closed feedback loop.
@djdak0695 ай бұрын
came for the CEO criticism, stayed for the end card. good shit
@Squagem5 ай бұрын
Can someone DM Dan and let him know someone is uploading on his channel?
@LuisSierra425 ай бұрын
Another YT channel that gets hacked
@ryanh36355 ай бұрын
IMAGINE IF WORKERS WE'RE COMPENSATED ADEQUATELY FOR INCREASED REVENUE OR PROFIT OR DIVIDEND ETC. FUCK THE CEOS
@Conservative_East5 ай бұрын
Yeahh #FuckTheCEOS
@Zuranthus5 ай бұрын
there are companies that do this, it's called revenue sharing. imo it should be mandatory for all public companies
@fantscher5 ай бұрын
Revenue sharing is basically a bonus. Leftover money after shareholders and CEOs are fat and satisfied. Usually enough for a family sized pizza per employee
@Zuranthus5 ай бұрын
@@fantscher it added $3 to my paycheck, i'll take anything over nothing
@patrickbateman16605 ай бұрын
Be like the ceo then. Sacrifice 99% of your pay to get paid in stock if it's so simple
@walkingpeepo5 ай бұрын
this guy is possibly the only guy who can make a youtube end card entertaining asf
@Coffeepotion5 ай бұрын
The notion of only the CEO being rewarded for the company doing well is something only CEOs could think is right, as they tend to think the success is *SOLELY* based on them and not the staff.
@probablylasly72785 ай бұрын
Any CEO should be capped at a % of the lowest paid employee and the shareholders could decide that percentage up to 100x like the survey you did where most people think its around that right now. Appreciate this video and especially the end card montage ;)
@RillianGrant5 ай бұрын
That'll effectively create a talent cap. It'll be hard to hire someone better if everyone is paid the same
@thomas.thomas4 ай бұрын
If you already own 500 million, why would you wanna work for 500k a year? They'd just go golfing instead
@shoheil775 ай бұрын
Watching this with my CEO
@thomasslone19645 ай бұрын
tell him he's next
@dillasoul22282 ай бұрын
Was he sweating?
@GosuNoKami2 ай бұрын
Same. My grandpa
@kiwitrainguyАй бұрын
Did you feel the tension in the room?
@Swancorner5 ай бұрын
The average American makes 4x the annual "poverty line" salary. The average CEO makes 800x the annual "poverty line" salary.
@homieinthesky89195 ай бұрын
Thats a pretty good stat. The average finlander makes around 3x the annual poverty line salary
@jambott55205 ай бұрын
Are you talking the same number? Cause while I don't know Finland specifically, I would imagine that cost of living would vary from America to Finland.
@homieinthesky89195 ай бұрын
@@jambott5520 average monthly salary in finland divided by the 1 person poverty line monthly salary in finland. It ads up to around 2.97 (all done in euros). His stat for the US is also fairly accurate when using individual income but its 4.07 .
@sportyeight77695 ай бұрын
That poverty line should really be re-evaluated, because that line changes a lot depending on where in the US you work.
@homieinthesky89195 ай бұрын
@@sportyeight7769 the same thing happens in finland. And depending on the STATE you live in the STATE has a different line. There is a reason why its called FEDERAL poverty line just like there is a FEDERAL minimum wage of which states make their own but can NOT go UNDER the FEDERAL number
@UnstableYT-u7k5 ай бұрын
If CEOs are making more money now, then they’re making more money than they did before.
@anonymous-entity5 ай бұрын
genius
@lmaolol93575 ай бұрын
Wait a minute, you are onto something.
@andyg8065 ай бұрын
A succinct deduction Ms. Harris.
@I-h4t3-4ll-0f-y0u5 ай бұрын
Damn. Mindblowing.
@_Azulite_5 ай бұрын
Do you have a peer reviewed source on this hypothesis? It seems pretty outlandish...
@GlitchedPerception2 ай бұрын
CEO pay based on stock price. CEO: “Price gauge everything and blame ‘inflation’.”
@FirstNameLastName-gh9iw5 ай бұрын
My mom used to be a ceo/owner in the late 90s, I remember her telling me she payed herself a similar salary to her employees. Now a days that’s unheard of
@Jacquellynnn5 ай бұрын
Even worse: Many of these packages are tied to the company’s stock price, not its actual valuation/market cap, so executives are incentivized to buy back stock in order to artificially drive up the stock price and meet the targets for their compensation packages. Rather than using that money to invest back into the company to help it grow. Hurting both shareholders and employees in the long run.
@thomasgolds45855 ай бұрын
Zombie companies rise up
@Great_PatBingsoo5 ай бұрын
Trying to understand what you’re saying. What actual valuation? Book price? True intrinsic value? A stock price multiplied by outstanding shares is its market cap… I think you are oversimplifying this quite a bit…
@johnbubble15 ай бұрын
If something’s related to your stock price it’s related to your market cap….market cap is share price x shares outstanding…
@johnbubble15 ай бұрын
So what you said is circular and doesn’t make sense but you’ve got 125 upvotes….go to school kids.
@OfficialCrashnet5 ай бұрын
I think people do miss this. If the incentive it set up poorly such as EPS or ROE rather than MCD. There is some logical reasons such as pulling back ownership % to be able to make unpopular changes or hostel take overs, rewarding owners in unexpected win-fall years, or if management is trying to boost some confidence back into the business. The issue is the non-financial media financially illiterate and just repeat talking points from their bubbles on X.
@Spire13245 ай бұрын
The reveal at 9:58 shook me to my core. Master of disguise.
@finnydog5 ай бұрын
I've never felt more attacked watching an end card in my life
@edgedg5 ай бұрын
I felt recognized.
@EvaHoffmann1532 ай бұрын
Successful investing is hard work because it means disciplining your mind to do the opposite of human nature. Buying during a panic, selling during euphoria, and holding on when you are bored and just craving a little action. Investing is 5% intellect and 95% temperament.
@TicheDebb02 ай бұрын
True! Investing in a variety of asset types, such as bonds, real estate, and foreign equities, can help spread out your money and lessen the impact of a market catastrophe. This is, in my opinion, the greatest strategy.
@EvelynBrooks02 ай бұрын
Even with the right technique and assets some investors would still make more than others, as an investor, you should’ve known that by now, nothing beats experience and that’s final, personally I had to reach out to a market analyst for guidance which is how I was able to grow my account close to a million, withdraw my profit right before the correction and now I’m buying again.
@MarshalWagner4572 ай бұрын
I’ve actually been looking into advisors lately, the news I’ve been seeing in the market hasn’t been so encouraging and I could really use some guide, but are they really that effective though?
@EvelynBrooks02 ай бұрын
Big Credits to Rebecca Noblett Roberts she has a web presence, so you can simply search for, there are some others but it might be difficult to get them, but Rebecca has been a good guide through the year.
@henryallard2452 ай бұрын
She appears to be well-educated and well-read. I ran a Google search on her name and came across her website; thank you for sharing.
@gaemr_o51475 ай бұрын
8:25 is such an insane quote
@Munchables5 ай бұрын
Watching that endcard is what I imagine most of the CEOs do with their work hours
@jasondashney4 ай бұрын
This comment section is absolutely full of people who think CEOs do nothing all day. Do any of you have a shred of evidence for this? Major corporate CEOs are savage workaholics. They take it way too far and it's almost like a sickness. That's how they get to where they get. It's the same as anybody with an obsessive personality. They get up extraordinarily early and work extraordinarily late and their personal life suffers greatly for it. Basically, they are nuts. The money is just a way to keep score.
@Munchables4 ай бұрын
@@jasondashney it's a joke mate :)
@mashpotato8325 ай бұрын
Finally some good journalism protecting shareholders, you're doing good work
@Muzsin15 ай бұрын
They started to publicate salaries in order to show how much they make and its not fair. the whole thing went backwards and guess what happened when CEO A saw that CEO B earns more... You even get the answer to what consultants do: CEOs pay them to show "market data" on how unfairly low their salaries are compared to other CEOs.
@kakos97775 ай бұрын
Reward Direcctor here, 100% this is the case.
@brianm1204 ай бұрын
I love how your stuff is both informative yet incredibly silly, so many bizarre meta jokes I’m never ready for, plus some of the best endcards on the platform
@haime810805 ай бұрын
It’s simple. I see a Good Work video dropped, I click play, I click the like button. Glorious cycle.
@regenwurm55845 ай бұрын
If you're not already rich, it's over.
@MCArt255 ай бұрын
If you're not already rich, then have you tried not being poor?
@LuisSierra425 ай бұрын
@@MCArt25 by being unborn
@JJ-zr6fu5 ай бұрын
Keep saying that to yourself while I get rich
@programmer18405 ай бұрын
Look at the stats, 80% of millionaires are self-made.
@homieinthesky89195 ай бұрын
The vast majority of millionairs are self made and the first billionairs were mostly self made also
@wipis595 ай бұрын
There are also various methods to temporarily boost stock prices creating short term gains but hampering long term profitability. This creates incentives for CEOs, board members, and even shareholders to act recklessly because it will get them more money this year, right before they cash out or retire. But it will result in layoffs for employees, lower returns for longer term investors, and worse products and prices for consumers.
@Lambda31415 ай бұрын
7:49 is one of the funniest graphics you guys have done. I would buy that on a t-shirt.
@parkourbee25 ай бұрын
EVE Online players could sweep the floor with most of these CEOs
@LokiBeckonswow5 ай бұрын
don't forget, in most developed countries, real wage values haven't really grown much since the 70s... coincidentally when the bretton woods system ended which unleashed the financial industries from their regulations - powerful points in history there merica, really hope you start to remember these key points soon
@badart32045 ай бұрын
Look at the productivity gains in relation to labor vs capital driven. Labor driven productivity has stagnated while capital driven has skyrocketed (software, factory machines, etc) so obviously the compensation goes towards those who control the capital.
@morpart75885 ай бұрын
Let's remember a lot of board members are executives at other companies themselves... Who rely on the same sorts of pay structure....
@jasondashney4 ай бұрын
That world is smaller than people think. If you're deciding on the pay for the CEO and it doesn't come out of your pocket, you're going to give them the bag because maybe the situation gets turned around somewhere else and that person is on the board and you are the CEO and you want the favour returned.
@minecraftkid509784 ай бұрын
I work for a non profit hospital and our top 10 execs all make millions. The number one slot is 100 million+….. off the backs of people we need to help. I work for Norton health care
@YourCatOverlord5 ай бұрын
lets not forget that warner bros stock price is nearing as low as it was 20 years ago and yet the ceo's salary just keeps rising
@beelzeszel5 ай бұрын
This has still not convinced me that somebody doing so little work should make this much money above the people actually working.
@IsomerMashups5 ай бұрын
The problem here is you have a brain.
@JoeVirella5 ай бұрын
“Next nerd please!” 😂😂😂
@Lachronix5 ай бұрын
This channel is a great example of why you shouldn't worry what people think of you, cause they really aren't paying attention, cause they really don't care. They make a lot cause they're saving up to pay the debt of the American government all at once! Isn't that great guys! Dan Toomey would make a great album cover.
@PokhrajRoy.5 ай бұрын
A CEO getting paid 3,000 times more than their employees? Shocking yet not shocking. Also, shouldn’t there be a provision for a pool of money that works as a security net?
@sportyeight77695 ай бұрын
The best thing ? it's when they crash a company and get "rewarded" by a huge payout. And those being illegal now, they pay them to "manage" the compagny until they get a new CEO. Absolutely hilarious.
@TacticusPrime5 ай бұрын
Obviously, being a CEO isn't easy. But to suggest that the market is tight that it requires millions and millions of dollars to find good candidates is ludicrous. Especially given how many CEOs steer their companies into rocks and face no consequences.
@MostlyPennyCat5 ай бұрын
Because they can. Pure and simple. If your job opening is tailored towards greed, greed is what you get.
@johnny837465 ай бұрын
End card 😂. The amount of meta references and self reflexive humor on this channel is amazing!
@DirtbagLexi5 ай бұрын
Watching this at work in protest of my overpaid CEO
@jezza41935 ай бұрын
CEO's compensation is large because they are held accountable for business decisions. The only thing is CEO's can run a business into the ground for short term profits and have a businesses engage in illegal acts. Leaving the business and employees financially crippled only for the CEO to resign with millions of dollars in a golden parachute.
@apcfire5 ай бұрын
Oh yes, the shareholder. They really are the number one group being hurt here. I don't have working class people I know who are struggling or can't afford a roof over their head. It is the shareholder. Those poor and tirelessly working down trodden members of society. I shed a tear whenever I think about how unfairly they are being treated.
@afewspokesloose26995 ай бұрын
It's absurd that anyone views CEOs in such a divine light as of they're not living by the work and ideas of those below them.
@minomushi_hitogata5 ай бұрын
"It's crazy to think Oil CEOs have control over the global oil market" My brother in christ, where have you been for the past... EVERY CONFLICT WE'VE STARTED IN THE MIDDLE EAST
@minomushi_hitogata5 ай бұрын
How are these people economists when they aren't factoring in things like imperialism? Do they just think oil CEOs and others that deplete resources like Lithium just ask nicely? Lmao Musk had the govt attempt to coup venezuela so he could get more access to their lithium. The idea that CEOs in America have zero control over these things, while true to an extent, is not the case in practice. I mean hell, look at what the bread clip guy did when he came into money - joined the John Birch Society and funded the coup in Chile to install one of the most infamous dictators in history: Augusto Pinochet.
@minomushi_hitogata5 ай бұрын
I mean hell, we control the World Bank lol. If any country wants to exchange currency for another type of currency, the United States owns and operates the institutions that make that happen on a global scale. To assume our CEOs, especially with such inflated salaries are at the whim of the stock market with no manipulation tactics involved whatsoever is not only naive - it's incredibly irresponsible for them to do. Thank god for ppl like this handsome mustachioed ma- OH MY GOD IT WAS DAN THE WHOLE TIME
@DrN0075 ай бұрын
The unclickable thingies at the end are a must produce!
@Sythemn5 ай бұрын
My gawd... Look at the chart and when it starts to explode. It's tax brackets and the tech boom. How did the economist miss this??? 1963: Top tax bracket 91%. 1965: 70% 1982: 50% 1987: 38.5% Capital Gains taxes (aka a loophole for wealthy people to pay less in taxes) also peaked in 1979 at 35%. It'd nearly be impossible to make 300x your employees wages with no capital gains preferential treatment and a 90% top tax bracket.
@RillianGrant5 ай бұрын
91% tax is insane
@Kitajima2Ай бұрын
@@RillianGrantI wasn't then. And that's when Merica was great
@linkplays2952Ай бұрын
@@Kitajima2 when it was 90% they were actually paying 40%. our current ratio of top marginal tax rate to the effective tax rate is much better then back then. we need to raise taxes on where they actually get money instead of making 90% income tax which doesnt matter when they don't get a large base salary
@linkplays2952Ай бұрын
Yeah but 90% tax is unreasonable. It didnt matter at the time because they used other methods of income
@Kitajima2Ай бұрын
@@linkplays2952 I agree, they should be taxed on whatever money they get when they dump stocks, and whatever they make in a year.
@iammrbeat5 ай бұрын
Alright sickos, this is currently my favorite channel on KZbin.
@ethair89755 ай бұрын
There is no problem with 100% performance-based compensation the problem is that some CEOs get lots of money even when they don't perform well.
@EmperorQuacky5 ай бұрын
It would seem most, these days. And correlated, lower positions often get no reward even for fantastic performance.
@justin_time5 ай бұрын
That end card had me shooketh.
@youngstown89415 ай бұрын
The question is very good and not easy to answer, if we take into account all the circumstances. F.e.; 1. CEOs may "seek" higher compensation ("rent"), but, since they would always have been doing that, what would really matter is their power to influence this outcome. 2. The stock market isn´t exactly an invention of the last couple of decades either. Company leaders would long have seen it as part of their job to increase stock price. 3. Having the greatest "head" of a company the same company can afford *sounds* smart enough, but is very misleading as to where the *majority* of a company´s brain power lies. It´s more about having great teams for important areas. 4. While companies with very high executive pay probably did well, other companies without such pay probably also did well. That the multiplication of executives´ pay is commensurate with a multiplication of the company´s fortunes sounds very unlikely to me. 5. It´s hard to evade high executive pay as an investor (ranging from very small to very big). Most major companies will see it as de facto necessity to make themselves look top notch, because they both have the money and know to hire the "best" leadership. In other words: If it´s *expected* to have very highly paid leadership, because so many companies have it, then the lack of it is seen as a flaw or even a warning sign.
@lm6453 ай бұрын
Politeness ratchet then? Rude to pay less?
@HolyAvgr5 ай бұрын
I just want to make explicit the fact that at 200x the actual "time" rate of earning is roughly 16 and a half years. That is, for every monthly payment the average worker makes, they make roughly 16.6 years of monthly payments. 16.6 years. Holy shit.
@MrGoodeats5 ай бұрын
Wah wah wah. Still more deserving than the wagie
@HolyAvgr5 ай бұрын
@@MrGoodeats Are you having fun licking those boots that hard?
@glitchedoom2 ай бұрын
@@MrGoodeatsYou'd think someone named MrGoodeats wouldn't like the taste of boots so much.
@MrGoodeats2 ай бұрын
@@glitchedoom how is that boot licking? lmao
@dukkiegamer17335 ай бұрын
In the gaming industry it's especially bad because every quarter hundreds to thousands of people get laid off at large companies while the people at the top get increased pay year on year. CEO's earning enough money to employing those laid off employees for years to come. That's just crazy.
@TheHunterOrion-5 ай бұрын
I don't see a problem with stock based pay...if EVERYONE gets stock based pay. Everyone working for a company should get a base salary AND some sort of profit sharing pay
@ncamisilengcongca5 ай бұрын
Watching the whole video after our investigator came out of a trashcan is wild 😂😂😂
@fexcab5 ай бұрын
“That’s right…I know words” 😂😂😂😂😂
@nutmegthedog69075 ай бұрын
I might be a sicko and I might have watched the death card. But at least I’m not making 200 more than the average employee.
@markthompson61395 ай бұрын
For those still unclear on how CEOs can translate their “shares” into actual money whilst not completely devaluing the company, let me introduce you to debt. You see, if you own something with supposed value, then someone else out there may offer to give you a loan while you give them leverage over said asset. Then you can spend that “debt” freely but knowing you may have to pay interest at some point, but never plan on running out of money because the next pay package gives you more stock you never intend to actually sell which allows you to get loans you never intend on paying back and none of that is considered income so the taxman sees nothing…That dear friends is how you translate stock options and positions into immense long term debt which you cancel when you subscription to life expires…
@onthedre19 күн бұрын
Things cost more now, and companies aren't paying people correct wages.
@GoodWorkMB5 ай бұрын
We have now fully investigated CEO compensation. What should we cover next?
@dickjohnson85785 ай бұрын
Private equity firms part 2. But about how they (and corporations and LLCs in general) are buying up so much residential real estate.. specifically single family homes.
@dickjohnson85785 ай бұрын
Private equity firms part 2. But about how they (and corporations and LLCs in general) are buying up so much residential real estate. Specifically single family homes.
@dickjohnson85785 ай бұрын
Fucking KZbin censorship.
@dickjohnson85785 ай бұрын
Private equity firms part 2. But about how they (and corporations and LLCs in general) are buying up so much residential real estate. Specifically single family homes.
@dickjohnson85785 ай бұрын
Private equity firms part 2. But about how they (and corporations and LLCs in general) are buying up so much residential real estate. Specifically single family homes.
@PokhrajRoy.5 ай бұрын
0:16 Freeze frame for the ages
@videos-de-fisica5 ай бұрын
the end card bit is glorious
@bungercolumbus5 ай бұрын
I've always found it crazy how some people could have owned 200 billion dollars with no problem. Now I just learned the fact that 60 years ago this wasn't a thing. Crazy.
@CanicusMotors5 ай бұрын
As a CEO of a small company in Sweden (8 people), I make 35 % more than the average employee in the company. (Average is 35000 SEK, and I'm at 47000 SEK). It's amazing how big different there are in other organizations, I find our difference to be too low.
@C3l3bi15 ай бұрын
most european countries dont suffer these issues like america does. because we are not a oligarchy
@IsomerMashups5 ай бұрын
@@C3l3bi1 Most European countries also aren't so irrationality opposed to having a bit of socialism in their government.
@cozygung3 ай бұрын
We need someone to shake up the stock market. Something to decouple CEOs and their company’s stocks… Like how the BSOD from Crowd-strike affected many people worldwide, except, it was quickly covered up as a bug by the media.
@spoddie5 ай бұрын
Monopolies. Every part of the US economy is concentrated to a small group.
@dogbone86Ай бұрын
That door handle miss 0:25 😂😂😂
@Canthary5 ай бұрын
Imagine if a company performed well, the workers who made that success possible would get a good bonus as well
@terencetan57125 ай бұрын
My problem is they don’t even get punished when they fail
@cyberking1585 ай бұрын
the road to hell is paved with good intentions bro how tf did we end up here...
@zenocode5 ай бұрын
I love how you started the video from behind the trashcan 😂
@Tulip2585 ай бұрын
Someone will eventually slip up and say, “Let them eat cake.”
@Winspur19825 ай бұрын
Every day with Melania Trump as First Lady was as bad as that. She didn't need to say it! (There was of course the "I don't care do u?" jacket)
@deezboyeed67645 ай бұрын
Already happened repeatedly, unfortunately the rich have a very good propaganda system in place to stop anyone actually asking questions
@mrhockey12985 ай бұрын
Don't worry folks. A lot of employees success is also tied to company performance as well. I had a whole percent increase in my pay last year because I'm a "valued employee" and the company saw "record breaking profits". You too can be part of this wave of success if you forget you have a family and decide your company's time is worth more than yours...
@bloodyidit45065 ай бұрын
Plain fact is none of this money is going to be used to improve services or companies, which is why we're in a massive recession that has not ceased snd also massive inflation. Something has got to give, and they better start giving back before it is taken.