What about a maximum wage?

TALKING POLITICS - BY GORDON CAMPBELL
Last updated 05:00 11/03/2010

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OPINION: By writing a book about her experience at Telecom, former chief executive Theresa Gattung can now freely promote her own version of the reforms visited on her old firm by the previous Government.

Many players in the telecommunications industry regarded those reforms as being at least a decade or more overdue, but Gattung plainly feels aggrieved about how Telecom's market dominance was exposed to genuine competition.

However, even that argument has been shunted aside by her equal sense of grievance that the current chief executive, Paul Reynolds, is now getting a $7 million remuneration package to do her old job. Has Gattung been treated badly ?

In one sense, it seems ridiculous to regard anyone who was receiving over $3 million a year to do their job – not to mention her $5.4 million exit package – as a victim. After all, Gattung was free to negotiate her salary and incentive package, so can hardly blame others for the rewards that she accepted.

Back then, Gattung tended to justify her pay packet by referring to the going global rate for top chief executive talent.

Reynolds can now cite the same bizarre standard in his own defence – particularly since he inherited the leadership of a firm that was already on a downhill slope.

Instead of resenting whether Reynolds deserves to be getting twice her salary, Gattung might do well to ponder whether she truly deserved her own remuneration, given the number of challenges left in the "in" tray for Reynolds to resolve.

In short, Reynolds could argue that he is being paid more because he has to do a harder job.

Few will shed tears for Gattung. Hopefully though, she might cause many to query whether anyone really does deserve such stratospheric levels of pay – given that the costs will ultimately fall on Telecom customers in particular, and on society in general.

Is Paul Reynolds really doing one of the most valuable jobs in our society? Do we benefit, in terms of social cohesion, from having some people paid so much and others – such as the people who care for the sick and aged in rest homes, or for our children at school – so relatively little?

Routinely, society gets to debate the pros and cons of the minimum wage law.

Perhaps we should put as much time and energy into debating the merits of enacting a law about the maximum wage.

Such a wage could be set at say, 50 times the average wage. That would mean no-one in New Zealand could be paid more than a million dollars a year, surely sufficient motivation for anyone to do their job properly.

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Subsequently, our bidding advantage in attracting talent on the global chief executive market would be based on the quality of our environment, natural and social.

Many overseas studies show crime and health statistics tend to be worse in countries that tolerate extremes of income inequality.

If the minimum wage provides society with a decent floor, a maximum wage would arguably do the same thing at the top, and create a ceiling that would be within sight of all of us.

Perhaps then, we would not have to endure the resentful likes of Theresa Gattung, for whom $3 million plus a year was not enough.

- The Wellingtonian

4 comments
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SCT   #4   09:18 pm Mar 16 2010

Ben & Jerry's (the USA ice cream company) has a maximum wage of 7x the lowest wage. A good ratio.

gerry   #3   10:16 am Mar 12 2010

How about fixing the CEO remuneration as a percentage of the lowest paid worker? What % is 32,000 of 7 million though?

R.MacDonnell   #2   12:32 pm Mar 11 2010

Paying everyone pretty much the same wage worked really well in the former Soviet Union and China (pre-capitalism), and has done great things for the Cuban economy, hasn't it? Not. As long as we live in a democratic society, companies have the right to pay employees what they want. The consequences of those payment decisions are the resposibility of the company's shareholders. The company's customers may vote with their feet. This economic freedom is obviously an anathema to Gordon Campbell and others in the so called liberal left intelligentsia.

v   #1   08:02 am Mar 11 2010

For those working in Govt departments, there should certainly be a maximum wage. Ie. CEO's and managers, judges, and those on high salaries should have a maximum amount they can be paid as Phil Goff has suggested.

Mind you, I don't think this would work as Politicians will just change the rules as they feel fit, so that the Maximum wage will rise, whenever they feel like it. Of course, they will give you a lame excuse on why there doing it - and that will be the end of the story, there's not much the New Zealand public can do about it.

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