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Going to Extremes: CEOs vs. Slaves

by Barbara Ehrenreich

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             Recent findings shed new light on the increasingly unequal terrain of American society. Starting at the top executive level: You may have thought, as I did, that the guys in the C-suites operated as a team – or, depending on your point of view, a pack or gang – each getting his fair share of the take. But no, the rising tide in executive pay does not lift all yachts equally. The latest pay gap to worry about is the one between the CEO and his – or very rarely her—third in command.

            According to a just- reported study by Carola Frydman of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Raven E. Saks at the Federal Reserve, 30-40 years ago, the CEO’s of major companies earned 80 percent more, on average, than the third-highest-paid executives. By the early part of the 21st century, however, the gap CEO and the third in command had ballooned up to 260 percent.

            Now take a look at what’s happening at the very bottom of the economic spectrum, where you might have pictured low-wage workers trudging between food banks or mendicants dwelling in cardboard boxes. It turns out, though, that the bottom is a lot lower than that. On May 16, a millionaire couple in a woodsy Long Island suburb was charged with keeping two Indonesian domestics as slaves for five years, during which the women were paid $100 a month, fed very little, forced to sleep on mats on the floor, and subjected to beatings, cigarette burns and other torments.

This is hardly an isolated case (see my book, Global Woman: Nannies, Maids and Sex Workers in the New Economy, co-edited with Arlie Hochschild.) If the new “top” involves pay in the tens or hundreds of millions, a private jet and a few acres of

Nantucket, the new bottom is slavery. Some of America’s slaves are captive domestics, like the Indonesian women in

Long Island. Others are factory workers, and at least 10,000 are sex slaves lured from their home country to American brothels by promises of respectable jobs.

CEOs and slaves: these are the extreme ends of American class polarization. But a parallel kind of splitting is going in many of the professions. Top-ranked college professors, for example, enjoy salaries of several hundred thousand a year, often augmented by consulting fees and earnings from their patents or biotech companies. At the other end of the professoriate, you have adjunct teachers toiling away for about $5000 a semester or less, with no benefits or chance of tenure. There was a story a few years ago about an adjunct who commuted to his classes from a homeless shelter in

Manhattan, and adjuncts who moonlight as waitresses or cleaning ladies are legion.

Similarly, the legal profession, which is topped by law firm partners billing hundred of dollars an hour, now has a new proletariat of temp lawyers working for $19-25 an hour in sweatshop conditions. On sites like http://temporaryattorney.blogspot.com/, temp lawyers report working 12 hours a day, six days a week, in crowded basements with inadequate sanitary facilities. According to an article in American Lawyer, a legal temp  at a major New York firm reports being  “corralled in a windowless basement room littered with dead cockroaches,” where six out of seven exits were blocked.

Contemplating the violent and increasing polarization of American society, one cannot help but think of “dark energy,” the mysterious force that is propelling the galaxies apart from each other one at a speed far greater than can be accounted for by the energy of the original big bang. Cosmic bodies seem to be repelling each other, much as a CEO must look down at his CFO, COO, etc. and think, “They’re getting too close. I’ve got to make more, more, more!”

The difference is that the galaxies don’t need each other, and are free to go their separate ways nonchalantly. But the CEO presumably depends on his fellow executives, just as the star professor relies on adjuncts to do his or her teaching and the law firm partner is enriched by the sweated labor of legal temps. For all we know, some of those CEOs go home to sip their single malts in mahogany walled dens that have been cleaned by domestic slaves.

Why is it so hard for the people at the top to graciously acknowledge their dependency on the labor of others? We need some sort of gravitational force to counter the explosive distancing brought about by greed – before our economy imitates the universe and blows itself to smithereens.

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2 Responses to “Going to Extremes: CEOs vs. Slaves”

  1. linda laurin Says:

    As a BabyBoomer with three college degrees, unable to get an adjunct teaching position, much less a tenured professorship, I have known for years that many professors and higher ed administrators earning upwards of 100k per year were fleecing the higher educational system, from the janitors to the students to the now disenfranchised college educated individuals who aspire to become teachers because they love teaching as I do.

    There is something wrong with this nation and its people — wealthy Americans shafting their fellow Americans at every turn — turning this nation into a landscape of unfettered, extremist capitalist business practices — as void of morality, Christian values, or good will towards their fellow man as you can get.

    We have become the SICKO society that worships nothing but the God of money and materialism — even in the name of Jesus, Inc. on TBN.

    Unless “We The People” — the ones that are being turned into the third-world middle-class “SLAVES” of every variety in our society, disempower and incarcerate these individuals for their egregious, harmful, and unethical business practices — we are a “DOOMED” society.

    And maybe, by our and our government’s pathetic apathy, ineptitude, or cowardice, we have already signed our own death warrant.

    Our only hope is REVOLUTION! I pray that day is coming soon, because as a BabyBoomer I don’t have decades for this nation to change its maleovant, extremist capitalist ways.

    In the very near future, I may finally decide to pack my belongings and join the growing numbers of American Expatriats and leave my native country and all its societal ills to the illegal immigrants and the New Age Robber Baron Slavers who employ them behind.

    LLaurin
    Dallas, Texaas

  2. marie Says:

    If you do decide to leave, let me know. I can’t afford to live here anymore.

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