In the Netherlands (and to a lesser extent in Belgium) there is a huge debate going on about the excessive salaries of top-managers.
The CEO's of two big energy companies (Nuon and Essent) make enormous amounts of money, while the price of energy keeps going up and while the salaries of the ordinary employees are going down. The citizens and customers are tired of this. These CEO's never have to prove that they're worth this much money, and that must change - they think. The debate has reached the highest political levels and might set interesting precedents for the rest of Europe and the world.
The citizens and clients have united in their resistance and have stopped paying their bills in protest (
http://www.ikbetaalniet.nl translated as: "I won't pay any longer" - they demand that the shareholders reduce the CEO's salary to normal levels and that these top-managers prove their real productive value with hard numbers).
The shareholders will be acting soon, and they are on the side of the citizens and customers.
This time, this old debate has found scientific backing. World famous and Nobel Prize winning Dutch economist Jan Tinbergen published a fascinating and reveiling report about the matter. He looked at the real productivity of companies and economies, and who contributes what amount. Stunningly, the lower and middle "cadres" ("employees", I don't know how to translate this word) contribute positively to the productivity of companies and economies, while the upper cadres (the CEO's, CFO's etc...) all contribute negatively. (Amazing, isn't it?).
The report shocked the political community over here. It concluded, amongst other things, that top-managers are basically decoration and even bad for a company's performance. It showed how these top-managers use all kinds of strategies to keep themselves in power (ranging from intellectual terror to power abuse to blackmailing shareholders) and how they form a small network of people accross Europe and the USA who back each other and make informal deals about high salaries. The markets have stopped working here.
This comes from a widely respected, world famous economist, known for his objective analysis. The guy basically calls upon us to dump top-managers unless they prove their value by hard numbers.
I think this is a very interesting debate. I hope it spills over into all European countries and into the US. Because with Peak Oil, we're going to see a lot more manipulation by CEO's, who quickly want to grab a piece of the pie now that they still have the opportunity. What do you think?
(For those who understand Dutch, here's an online discussion and forum, with TV debates and a lot of interesting material:
http://www.ncrv.nl/rondomtien ).