Reprinted from Robert Reich Blog
Marissa Mayer tells us a lot about why Americans are so angry, and why anti-establishment fury has become the biggest single force in American politics today.
Mayer is CEO of Yahoo. Yahoo's stock lost about a third of its value last year, as the company went from making $7.5 billion in 2014 to losing $4.4 billion in 2015. Yet Mayer raked in $36 million in compensation.
Even if Yahoo's board fires her, her contract stipulates she gets $54.9 million in severance. The severance package was disclosed in a regulatory filing last Friday with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
In other words, Mayer can't lose.
It's another example of no-lose socialism for the rich -- winning big regardless of what you do.
Why do Yahoo's shareholders put up with it? Mostly because they don't know about it.
Most of their shares are held by big pension funds, mutual funds, and insurance funds whose managers don't want to rock the boat because they skim the cream regardless of what happens to Yahoo.
In other words, more no-lose socialism for the rich.
I don't want to pick on Ms. Mayer or the managers of the funds that invest in Yahoo. They're typical of the no-lose system in which America's corporate and financial elite now operate.
But the rest of America works in a different system.
Theirs is cut-throat hyper-capitalism -- in which wages are shrinking, median household income continues to drop, workers are fired without warning, two-thirds are living paycheck to paycheck, and employees are being classified as "independent contractors" without any labor protections at all.
Why is there no-lose socialism for the rich and cut-throat hyper-capitalism for everyone else?
Because the rules of the game -- including labor laws, pension laws, corporate laws, and tax laws -- have been crafted by those at the top, and the lawyers and lobbyists who work for them.
Does that mean we have to await Bernie Sanders's "political revolution" (or, perish the thought, Donald Trump's authoritarian populism) before any of this is likely to change?
Before we go to the barricades, you should know about another CEO named Hamdi Ulukaya, who's developing a third model -- neither no-lose socialism for the rich nor hyper-capitalism for everyone else.
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