Jeremy
Corbyn's proposal to put a cap on high pay has provoked a big
reaction. I set out, back in 2009 the objections to a state imposed cap. But, other elements of
what Corbyn and others, such as Clive Lewis, have suggested are more
interesting. That involves scrapping the rigged way in which
executives pay is set by remuneration committees, stuffed with other
executives, and instead to put a majority of workers on those
remuneration committees. Yet, not surprisingly such suggestions have
provoked as much, if not more, opposition.
The
socialist objection to state imposed controls is that they are
bureaucratic and inefficient, creating a series of distortions that
impose additional costs, but also that such controls are always used
as a means of attacking workers not limiting the power of capital.
As I said back in 2009, at a time when inflation is about to rise
sharply, the introduction of pay controls, nominally to limit high
pay, will quickly be turned into pay controls on ordinary wages.
Moreover, if
the wages of say top class footballers are reduced, who will benefit
from that? It will not be other workers, but will simply result in
even bigger profits for the large football clubs, and for bigger
dividends for the money-lending capitalists who own shares in those
football clubs. No one has so far demonstrated how any similar
controls would be placed on those dividends, and yet it is the
unearned income going to the money-lending capitalists, which is the
real basis of income inequality, just as the main basis of inequality
in society derives not from inequality of income, but inequality of
wealth.
The
opposition to the proposals from Tories and other representatives of
the money-lenders is, however, thoroughly hypocritical and apologist.
That includes the opposition to the proposals by former Corbyn
advisors David “Danny” Blanchflower, and Richard Murphy.
Those objections come down to the argument that the high pay of
executives is simply the consequence of competition, and, in a global
market place, if Britain were to limit these salaries, the
entrepreneurs that receive them would not set up businesses in
Britain. There are so many fallacies in this line of argument that
its difficult to know where to start.
Firstly, the
executives that receive these high salaries are not “entrepreneurs”.
They are not responsible for taking risks with their own capital,
and establishing new businesses. The small private capitalists that
do fall into that category generally do not get paid these huge
salaries. But, the executives of banks like RBS, HSBC or of giant
multinational oil companies like BP, who are the ones that get these
huge pay packets, are not people who have mortgaged their house to
start these businesses. They are businesses that were started
decades, often centuries ago. The executives today are simply
employees.
In economic
terms, their pay is part of the profits of the company, because these
higher executives true function is not to look after the interests of
the company itself, but rather to look after the interests of the
money-lending capitalists, who own shares in the company. That is
why these executives, over recent years, have used company profits
not to expand the business, but to continually increase the
proportion going to dividend payouts, and to use profits to buy back
shares, so as to push share prices, and therefore, the paper wealth
of shareholders ever higher. As Andy Haldane pointed out a while
ago, in the 1970's, dividends accounted for around 10% of company
profits, whereas today they account for around 70%.
The high pay
of executives is not the result of competition, but of monopoly.
That monopoly is the monopoly of those same executives that have
created a closed shop which limits and determines who is allowed to
sit on company boards, and to determine pay levels through tightly
controlled remuneration committees. The proposal to open up and
democratise those company boards and remuneration committees is then
a useful proposal. If workers dominated those committees, after all,
and they found that their interests are best served by having highly
paid executives being employed, then workers on those boards will
appoint them and pay those high wages, so as to further their own
interests. The real objection to that proposal is that if such a
situation were to arise, the emperor would be seen to be wearing no
clothes. The reality would be exposed that there are plenty of
capable executives available to carry out necessary functions at a
fraction of the pay currently handed to executives, and, moreover, it
would be exposed that, in reality, the vast majority of these higher
executives have no useful role to play, over and above the actual job
of managing companies that is carried out, day after day, by the real
functioning capitalists, the day to day professional managers whose
pay is little different to that of other workers.
The reality
is that the wages of these higher executives is usually in inverse
proportion to the actual labour they perform, and the value they add
to the business. Anyone who has simply watched the farce in the
banking industry, in BHS and a string of other large companies must
be aware of that reality. And that illustrates the hypocrisy of
those that continue to defend the exorbitant pay of these executives,
when it is compared to the attitude to those who actually do create
value in businesses, the workers.
In recent
weeks we have seen the furore whipped up in the Tory media over the
strikes by workers on Southern Rail, and on the London Underground.
Millions of workers in London, we were told depended upon these rail
and tube workers to get to work etc. Without the tube and rail
workers London would grind to a halt. Clear evidence, one would think, of just how valuable, therefore, the labour of those tube and rail
workers is! Indeed, it might well be argued that if the astronomical
profits of all those other businesses in London, are so dependent on
the tube and rail workers getting their own employees safely into
work each day, then those businesses themselves should be paying a
much higher cost for that benefit.
It only
needs workers on the tube or the railways to not provide their labour
for one day, before the real value of that labour is seen, as London
grinds to a halt. By contrast, were any or all of the top executives
of London Transport, or of Southern Rail to take a day, or even a
week off work, would anyone in the travelling public be any the
wiser? Would it make any difference to their daily activity?
You might
think then, given the argument for the need to pay astronomical wages
to executives, that this would mean supporting much higher pay for
the workers that actually produce the goods and services upon which
society actually depends. But, no. When it comes to considering the
wages and position of workers, the argument suddenly changes. Rather
than the indispensable function of tube and rail workers leading to
demands that they be handsomely rewarded in their pay and working
conditions, instead we are told that restrictions on their right to
strike must be imposed so that they cannot impede the profit making
of all those other businesses!
The idea
that workers could have a majority on remuneration committees was
dismissed by Blanchflower, speaking on TV, by saying that
shareholders would never agree to such proposals. But, shareholders
have to operate within the laws of corporate governance, and those
laws can be set by Parliament. However, what that objection does
highlight is the ridiculous position whereby shareholders, who are
only people who lend money-capital to the business, no different to
the way bond holders lend money-capital to the business, in return for a
bond, or a bank lends money-capital to a business in the shape of a loan, are
able, unlike these other lenders, to control the company's activity,
and to appoint these top executives.
What the
objection highlights is the need to change the laws of corporate
governance to remove that unjustified, privileged position of
shareholders, and to place control over businesses where it belongs,
in the hands of elected committees of the workers and managers of the
company. That exists to some extent in Germany, where workers via
their trades unions appoint 50% of the members of supervising boards;
it was proposed in the EU's Draft 5th Directive on CompanyLaw, and it was proposed in the 1975 Bullock Report, on industrial
democracy, in Britain.
But,
Blanchflower is correct in saying that if Britain under Corbyn were
to try to implement such changes in company law, it would face the
obvious hostility of all those money lending capitalists, who would
move the focus of their operations to other European countries. Yet,
this objection is quite easily dealt with. It amounts to simple
defeatism, and support for a race to the bottom, no different to
objections in relation to asking businesses to pay higher taxes, or
to stop sending children up chimneys. If someone were to say, we
cannot have legislation that prevents the employment of child labour,
or establishes a maximum ten hour day, because otherwise firms would
set up business elsewhere, we would immediately see the despicable
nature of such arguments. The same despicable arguments, in fact,
that were raised, in the 19th century, against legislation
to prevent child labour, to establish a ten hour day, and to
introduce factory legislation.
Of course,
in some countries, the level of social productivity is so low that
many of their businesses could not function without child labour,
long hours and poor conditions, as was the case in Britain at the
start of the industrial revolution. Yet, by and large, businesses do
not leave Britain and set up in these other poorer countries. The
reason is that the higher level of social productivity in Britain far
outweighs any advantages that may accrue to the poorer country from
using cheaper labour-power and imposing harsher working conditions. And,
firms do not leave Britain, due to such legislation, to set up in
France or Germany, because those countries also have similar
legislation.
What the
objections from the Tories, and from people like Blanchflower, highlight in this regard, therefore, is not only is socialism only
conceivable on an international scale, but even social-democratic
solutions to the problems created by capitalism are only possible on
an international, at minimum EU, scale. That is why its clear that
no solution to those problems can be accomplished via Brexit, which
will only throw up further obstacles to the development of
international regulation and control of capital, and exacerbate the
tendency for a race to the bottom. But, for the same reason the
proposals of Cameron ahead of the referendum, and of assorted
Blair-rights, that sought to diminish that EU wide regulation, in
favour of a return to greater national control – the same is
actually true of some of the Corbyn proposals for greater regional
autonomy and decision making – also point in the wrong direction,
because they inhibit the required development of control and
regulation on that larger scale.
The answer
to the objections of the Tories, and of people like Blanchflower, is
for Corbyn to spearhead a movement, alongside other social-democratic
forces in the EU, such as Syriza and Podemos, and the Left Bloc, for
a return to the social-democratic ideas of the 1970's, for greater
industrial democracy, and a restriction on the power of money-lending
capital. The answer is for an EU wide campaign for a change to the
laws of corporate governance to establish democratic control via the
election of Boards comprising the workers and managers of companies,
and not shareholders.
It is the
workers and managers in companies that are the long-term stakeholders
in their future, not the shareholders, who increasingly are only
interested in short-term, speculative capital gain, and in the case
of high-frequency trading, speculative buying and selling of shares
that lasts only a fraction of a second! It is, therefore, workers
and managers, and not shareholders, that have a vested interested in
the long-term future of businesses, and it is workers and managers
who should thereby have democratic control over the decisions that
determine that future.
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