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Money For Nothing How Ceos And Boards Enrich Themselves While Bankrupting America John Gillespie David Zweig

  • SKU: BELL-48783844
Money For Nothing How Ceos And Boards Enrich Themselves While Bankrupting America John Gillespie David Zweig
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Money For Nothing How Ceos And Boards Enrich Themselves While Bankrupting America John Gillespie David Zweig instant download after payment.

Publisher: Free Press
File Extension: EPUB
File size: 1.86 MB
Pages: 320
Author: John Gillespie; David Zweig
ISBN: 9781416597766, 141659776X, 2009032328
Language: English
Year: 2010

Product desciption

Money For Nothing How Ceos And Boards Enrich Themselves While Bankrupting America John Gillespie David Zweig by John Gillespie; David Zweig 9781416597766, 141659776X, 2009032328 instant download after payment.

A Bank of America director questioned the CEO's $76 million pay package in a year when the bank was laying off 12,600 workers and found herself dropped from the board without notice a few months later.

According to their employment agreements -- approved by boards -- 96 percent of large company CEOs have guarantees that do not allow them to be fired "for cause" for unsatisfactory performance, which means they can walk away with huge payouts, and 49 percent cannot be fired even for breaking the law by failing in their fiduciary duties to shareholders.

The General Motors board gave CEO Rick Wagoner a 64 percent pay raise -- to $15.7 million -- in 2007, when the company lost $38.7 billion. The company went bankrupt two years later at a cost of $52 billion to shareholders and another $13.4 billion to all taxpayers.

If you own stock -- and 57 million U.S. households do -- every cent of these outrages comes out of your pocket, thanks to boards of directors who are supposed to represent your interests. Every customer, employee, and taxpayer is also being hurt and American business is being imperiled. In the most recent economic collapse, almost all attention has focused on the greed, recklessness, or incompetence of CEOs rather than the negligence of boards, who ought to be held equally, if not more, accountable because the CEOs theoretically work for them. But the world of boards has become an entrenched insiders' club -- virtually free of accountability or personal liability. Too often, corporate boards act as enabling lapdogs rather than trustworthy watchdogs, costing us trillions.

Money for Nothing exposes the glaring flaws in this dysfunctional system, including directors who are selected by the CEOs they are meant to hold accountable; compensation consultants who legitimize outrageous pay; accountants and attorneys who see no evil; legal vote buying; rampant conflicts of interest; and much more.

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