Workers received a terrifying  message last week, one far more bone-chilling than Halloween ghouls or Freddie  Krueger. It was this: Retirement security is only for CEOs, not for workers.
  Two  sources delivered this frightening news. One was a dozen Republican presidential  candidates insisting during last week’s debate that Social Security be slashed.  The other was a new report detailing how corporations killed worker pension  plans while simultaneously gilding CEO retirement accounts.
  There’s a simple explanation  for this ill-treatment of the vast majority. It results from the persistent  demand by CEOs and other 1 percenters that all wealth get deposited in their  pockets. That means grotesquely fat paychecks, perks and pensions for them and  no raises and no retirement for workers whose labor creates corporate profits.
  That means CEOs and 1  percenters paying Social Security taxes at a much lower rate than workers do,  hobbling the program. The uber-wealthy get away with this because politicians,  particularly Republicans, are their indentured servants. Billionaires bankroll  their campaigns and get exactly what they want in return.
  Federal rules facilitate CEOs  amassing pensions worth hundreds of millions of dollars. Workers can’t  contribute more than $24,000 a year to their 401 (k) retirement plans, but  corporations can stash unlimited cash in special CEO retirement accounts- and  then get a tax break for doing it!
  A report issued last week by  the Center for Effective Government and the Institute for Policy Studies  details the disparity in CEO and worker pension treatment. Titled “A Tale of  Two Retirements,” it notes that the 100 largest CEO retirement funds are worth  a combined $4.9 billion. That equals the entire old-age savings of 41 percent  of all American families.
  These 100 CEOs have awarded  themselves the same amount of pension money that 116 million Americans have  scrimped and saved for retirement.
  Among those 100 high rollers,  the guy with the most mammoth retirement account is David Novak, who moved this  year from CEO of YUM Brands to executive chairman. YUM, which owns the low-wage  restaurant chains Taco Bell, Pizza Hut and KFC, handed Novak a $234 million  pension.
  For Novak, that’s a pension  check totaling $1.3 million every month until the day he dies. A million a  month! In the meantime, YUM stopped providing pensions to new hires in 2001 and  owes its workers’ pension fund $310 million.
  This is  typical corporate misconduct. YUM poured $234 million into Novak’s retirement  fund. But the corporation just can’t seem to find the $310 million in owes the  pension account for thousands of its dedicated workers.
  The guy  whose pension ranks number five on the list is John H. Hammergren, CEO of  McKesson. The corporation has handed him a $145.5 million pension fund, which  means he can collect $819,243 a month.
  Though that’s less than what  YUM gave Novak, McKesson bested YUM in one area. It denied pensions to new  hires beginning in 1996, five years before YUM did.
  Hammergren, whose average  annual pay is $50 million, was a new hire at McKessonin 1996. Though he wasn’t  named CEO until years later, clearly, he got himself a special exemption from  that no-pension for new hires rule. CEOs don’t follow the rules.
  Then there’s Marilyn Hewson,  the å_female CEO with the largest pension account. Lockheed Martin deposited $60  million in her retirement fund, enough to give her a monthly check totaling  $341,649.
  Hewson’s corporation  eliminated pensions for newly hired salaried workers in 2006 and newly hired  union workers in 2012. Then, last year, it announced that it would begin  freezing the pensions of 48,000 salaried workers starting in 2016.
  That’s retirement luxury for  CEO Marilyn Hewson; retirement poverty for Lockheed Martin workers.
  While corporations stash more  and more in the accounts of CEOs like Hewson, they’ve slashed more and more  from workers, like those whose labor makes profits for Lockheed Martin. In the  early 1990s, 35 percent of private sector workers received a defined benefit  pension plan at work. Now it’s 18 percent.
  Today, nearly half of all  workers have no access at all to any retirement plan at work, no defined  benefit pension, no 401 (k). Those with a 401 (k) have paltry savings, an  average of $18,433, only enough to provide a retirement check of $104 a month -  somewhat less than Novak’s $1.3 million a month.
  Because so many corporations  have decided only CEOs need pensions, a huge portion of the nation’s elderly  relies heavily on Social Security. For 24 percent of the approximately 40  million senior citizens who receive Social Security, it is the sole source of  retirement income. It amounts to $1,335 a month, about $16,000 a year, barely  enough to pay for food, shelter and health care.
  Yet Republicans running for  president want to cut it. Or they want Americans to work longer before getting  it. Sen. Ted Cruz, Sen. Rand Paul and Gov. Chris Christie have all said  Americans should be forced to work past age 65. They’re demanding 66-year-old  roofers and carpenters and iron workers continue to carry heavy loads and climb  scaffolds and ladders. They’re just fine with 66-year-old tire builders and  steelworkers and refinery workers being forced to stand all day operating  body-battering machines.
  At the debate last week, Sen.  Marco Rubio said he’d protect Social Security for his mother but not for  younger people. Former Hewlett-Packard CEO Carly Fiorina, who left the company  with a $40 million golden parachute when she was fired, said the government  should do nothing to help workers.
  Sure. She was fine with the  government giving Hewlett-Packard tax breaks that padded her pay and pension.  Now that she’s got her $40 million, she thinks the government should do  absolutely nothing for working people’s pensions or for the 40 million  Americans who depend on Social Security.
  The obvious fix for Social  Security is to require the wealthy to pay the tax on all of their income, just  as middle class and low-wage workers do. As it is now, the rich pay the tax  only on the first $118,500 they earn. They don’t pay a cent of the tax on the  rest. No matter how many millions they pull down.
  The obvious fix for pensions  is to require corporations to provide for workers the same kind of benefits  they gift wrap for top executives and to end the exclusive tax breaks given CEO  pensions.
  Fiorina and other fat cat CEOs  believe they’re special and shouldn’t have to follow the same rules or pay the  same taxes as workers. American workers will continue to suffer retirement  insecurity until they stop electing politicians who are indentured servants to  1 percenters and CEOs like Fiorina.
Date Posted
               
 
