Carl Bronski
In the wake of one of the largest single layoffs in Canadian history,
it has been revealed that the 2014 separation package for Target
department store CEO Gregg Steinhafel exceeds the severance payments for
all of the 17,600 employees who have lost their jobs as a result of the
January 2015 Target Canada bankruptcy.
Earlier this month, Target
announced that it will close all of its 133 retail outlets in the
country. The laid-off employees will receive up to 16 weeks compensation
in wages and benefits. The amount set aside roughly meets the minimum
requirement for severance packages as set out by labour law. To cover
the payments to its employees, Target has earmarked $56 million (US).
In
contrast, as the company bled red ink, CEO Steinhafel cashed in with a
spectacular “golden parachute” last May totaling $61 million (US) in
monies and deferred stock options after he was forced by the Board of
Directors to resign his position. Steinhafel had spearheaded the
expansion of Target stores into Canada in 2013 which quickly turned into
an epic fiasco. Seven billion dollars were invested in the Canadian
expansion. In only 681 days of operation, the company recorded losses of
at least half of that.
Canadian customers, reeling from
stagnating wages and high unemployment rates that have been endemic in
Canada since 2008, had steered away from the department store in droves
due to uncompetitive price points and poor selection. In its request for
Steinhafel’s resignation, the board also cited fallout from the massive
January 2014 data breach of credit card information for its US-based
customers that occurred during his tenure. Neither occurrence, however,
was enough to diminish the CEO’s lavish payday. Indeed, after his
resignation, Steinhafel was kept on for several months by the board in
an advisory capacity.
Due to draconian cuts to unemployment
eligibility by the Conservative government of Prime Minister Stephen
Harper and the increasing use of part-time workers by retailers, many of
the Target workers will not have earned enough hours to claim
unemployment insurance payments after their meagre severance payments
run out.
The obscene discrepancies between the earnings of workers
and those at the top of the corporate ladder will come as no surprise
to working people. A new study has shown that Canada’s top 100 CEOs
received compensation increases double the rate of average wage-earners
from 2008 to 2013. In 2013 alone, CEO pay increased by 11 percent.In
that year the country’s top executives raked in an average of $9.2
million.
In Canada, the top CEOs now receive 206 times more in
annual compensation than the average Canadian worker. In the United
States, where Steinhafel resides, CEOs earn 354 times as much as the
average worker at their companies. Steinhafel managed to outpace even
this outrageous gap. His 2013 pay was 597 times greater than those of
the average Target worker, second only to Walmart CEO Michael Duke, who
received 1,034 times more in compensation than workers in his company.
Overall,
average wages for workers in Canada have continued to stagnate with
earnings rises falling behind the annual inflation rate over the past
eight years. The average Canadian income in 2013 stood at $47,358. In
Ontario, the heart of the Canadian manufacturing sector, the median
income has fallen by 3.2 percent since 2006. In Windsor, an
ever-diminishing hub of Canadian auto manufacturing, the median income
has collapsed by almost 14 percent. In Toronto, the financial centre of
the country, wages have fallen by 3.2 percent over that same time
period.
The pervasive and ever-increasing growth of social
inequality is the most fundamental characteristic of contemporary social
and political life, not just in Canada and the US, but internationally.
It is rooted in the very nature of the capitalist system. In every
country, corporate chiefs unashamedly enrich themselves while overseeing
the wholesale destruction of jobs, wages and working conditions of
ordinary working people, and demanding governments further slash
essential social programs to fund tax cuts and boondoggles for the
wealthy few.
The obscene levels of wealth at the top of society
and growing economic distress among the broad masses is a product of the
underlying capitalist economic system.
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