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Institute for Policy Studies
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  • February 9, 2012

    Mother Jones features article “Full Testimony to the Senate Budget Committee on Inequality, Mobility, and Opportunity”

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  • February 7, 2012

    International Business Times

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    Backers of the provision, naturally, disagree. In a March 2011 letter to the SEC, the Institute for Policy Studies said the requirement is needed because extreme pay differentials between CEO's and their employees can lead to lower morale, higher turnover rates, and reinforce a "celebrity CEO" culture that is not conductive to high executive performance.

    "To keep their pockets stuffed, executives will nurture the hierarchies that frustrate enterprise empowerment. They will devote themselves to making their companies bigger, not better," the Institute wrote. "Corporations that lavish multiple millions on their executive superstars, even if those millions [are] mere 'peanuts' in the grand corporate scheme of things, create great fortunes for their executives. They do not create great enterprises."

  • January 29, 2012

    The Federal Times features report “America Is Not Broke”

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    The Institute for Policy Studies puts the savings from overseas base closures as high as $184 billion over 10 years.

  • January 19, 2012

    Time Magazine features report “Executive Excess 2011: The Massive CEO Rewards for Tax Dodging”

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    "A recent report by the Institute for Policy Studies, a Washington-based think tank, found that CEOs at large U.S. firms earned, on average, $10.8 million in 2010, a 28% increase from the year before, while the average worker took home $33,121, a mere 3% more. At that level, CEOs’ paychecks are 325 times bigger than their employees’...

    "Chuck Collins, a specialist on income inequality at the Institute for Policy Studies, advocates tax reform that would hike levies on the wealthiest and end the abuse of offshore havens; new corporate rules that would enhance labor and community influence over company management; and restrictions on the ability of Big Business to fund and lobby politicians. Inequality 'is part of the natural dynamic of capitalism when there are no checks to counter­balance wealth and power,' Collins asserts."

  • January 3, 2012

    Blog Talk Radio

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  • December 15, 2011

    People's Weekly World

    Sarah Anderson of the Institute for Policy Studies pointed out "there's a big backlash from companies" against a requirement of the Dodd-Frank securities law, which applies to all firms, to disclose their top executives' compensation as a multiple of how much they pay their average worker.  The current ratio of CEO pay to average worker's pay is 325-1.

  • December 6, 2011

    The San Antonio Express-News features article “A Main Street Jobs Agenda”

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  • December 3, 2011

    Progressive Charlestown (RI) features article “A Main Street Jobs Agenda”

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  • December 1, 2011

    Democracy for America TV features report “America Is Not Broke”

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    A Democracy for America panel discussion of the Institute for Policy Studies report "America is Not Broke -- How to Pay for the Crisis While Making the Country More Equitable, Green, and Secure" (www.ips-dc.org) detailing 24 policy suggestions to secure $824 billion of deficit reduction every year.

  • December 1, 2011

    The Nation features report “America Is Not Broke”

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