The median worker at Lowe's, the home improvement
retailer, made just over $29,580 last year—not enough to
comfortably afford a modest one-bedroom rental home in the United States.
But the company was hardly cash-strapped in 2022. According to a report released
Thursday by the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS), Lowe's spent more than $14
billion on stock buybacks that year, providing an artificial boost to
the company's share price and further enriching wealthy
investors and executives.
If Lowe's had instead opted to use that cash to the benefit of
its employees, every one of the corporation's U.S. workers could have received
a $46,923 bonus, IPS calculated.
Lowe's is part of a group of companies that IPS
calls the Low-Wage 100, which includes the S&P 500 businesses with the
lowest median worker pay last year.
Between January 1, 2020 and May 31, 2023, Lowe's and other
Low-Wage 100 firms spent $341.2 billion on stock buybacks. Lowe's, whose CEO
saw total compensation of $17.5 million last year, has spent the most of any
Low-Wage 100 company on buybacks over the past three years, followed by Home
Depot, Walmart, and S&P Global.
The average CEO-to-median-worker pay ratio at Low-Wage 100
companies last year was 603 to 1, and the top executives of the low-wage
companies benefited directly from last year's splurge on stock buybacks, which
increase shareholders' ownership stake.
"The CEOs of the 90 Low-Wage 100 companies that have spent
funds on buybacks own approximately $14.9 billion worth of their company
stock," the IPS report notes. "At the 65 buyback companies where the
same person held the top job between 2019 and 2022, the CEOs' personal stock
holdings soared 33% to an average of $184.7 million.
Median pay at these firms rose only 10% to an average of
$31,972. These figures do not reflect inflation because the median pay figures
cover a global workforce."
IPS found that 51 of the companies in the Low-Wage
100—including Amazon, FedEx, and Johnson Controls—received a combined $24.1
billion worth of federal contracts between fiscal years 2020 and 2023,
potentially giving the federal government leverage to force the companies to
rein in out-of-control executive compensation and stock buybacks.
As part of a menu of proposed policy solutions, IPS urged
President Joe Biden's administration to give federal contractors that don't
repurchase their own shares priority in the awarding of subsidies and grants, a
move that would build on a policy the U.S. Commerce Department
enacted last year for semiconductor subsidies.
The group also called on federal lawmakers to pass
legislation to impose higher taxes on companies with yawning gaps between CEO
and worker pay. In 2021, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) proposed a bill that
would have hiked taxes on large corporations that pay their top executives over
50 times more than their median workers.
"Policymakers could do much more to narrow the
divides—including through executive action," said Sarah Anderson, director
of the IPS Global Economy Project and author of the new report. "President
Biden should wield the power of the public purse to push all corporate recipients
of taxpayer money to narrow their pay gaps, stop wasting money on buybacks, and
respect worker rights."
-Jake Johnson, Common Dreams
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