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WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
US: Defense and oil company executives reap windfalls from
Iraq war
By Naomi Spencer
15 September 2006
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Since September 11, 2001, and the Bush administrations
initiation of the war on terror, inequality in the
US has grown at a rapid rate and to grotesque proportions. The
criminal nature of war on Iraq is reflected in every facet of
American life, least surprisingly of all in the enormous fortunes
of the ruling elite. Indeed, the current war, the most privatized
in history, is viewed by a wide range of corporate executives
and investors as an open-ended outsourcing opportunity.
Congress has appropriated more than $314 billion thus far for
the illegal invasion and occupation of Iraq, largely at the expense
of infrastructure, education, and other basic requisites for modern
life at home. The massive government expenditures and cuts in
vital social programs that characterize the US war economy, however,
far from fostering restraint on the part of big business, have
paved the way for shameless price gouging, corporate windfalls,
tax cuts, pension-gutting and pay cuts for average workers in
the US.
Results of Executive Excess 2006, the thirteenth
annual chief executive officer compensation survey by the Institute
for Policy Studies (IPS), underscore the fact that the war has
benefited a very few to the detriment of the broad mass of the
population, both domestically and internationally.
Business Week estimates that in 1980 the ratio of US
executive to worker pay was 42-to-1. IPS found that by 1990 the
CEO-worker pay gap had grown to 107-to-1. In the period following
1990, one dominated by unprecedented deregulation and globalization,
executive pay soared while workers wages by and large stagnated,
generating a pay gap of 411-to-1. If the minimum wage had
risen at the same pace as CEO pay since 1990, the report
notes, it would be worth $22.61 today, rather than the actual
$5.15. Similarly, average worker pay would be more than
$108,000 in 2005, rather than $28,314.
After 9/11, pay levels of defense and energy CEOs soared. According
to the IPS, CEOs of the top 34 defense contractors saw their average
compensation double, from $3.6 million in 2002 to $7.2 million
in 2005. Since September 11, these 34 executives have pocketed
a combined total of nearly a billion dollars, which the IPS estimates
would be enough to cover the entire wage bill for more than
a million Iraqis for a year. Average defense CEO pay was
308 times the pay received by a deployed US Army private in 2005,
$25,000.
George David, CEO of Black Hawk helicopter manufacturer United
Technologies, raked in over $200 million between 2002 and 2005,
making him the highest paid defense executive. In 2004, David
took in $88.3 million in pay and stock options; last year his
pay was $31.9 million, still the top defense executive. Boeing
CEO W. James McNerney Jr. was not far behind in 2005, with $28.4
million.
The sharp rise in executive pay is directly tied to Pentagon
budget increases. Last year alone, government expenditures for
military contracts totaled $269 billion. As the ISP points out,
the excessive funds have accelerated the virtual revolving
door between the Pentagon and private contractors. Former
Defense Secretary William S. Cohen, for example, resigned in 2001
to become a lobbyist for the defense industry.
Divestitures in military health care contributed to the enormous
profits of managed care company Health Net and the fortunes of
its top executives. CEO Jay Gellert hauled in over $28 million
between 2002 and 2005, a 1,134 percent increase in compensation
over the four years prior to war. Gellert is the defense executive
posting the biggest pay increase in the IPS survey.
Health Net holds contracts to provide health services to active
military personnel as well as mental health counseling and care
of wounded troopsprofiteering driven by the huge numbers
of injuries. The companys profits have increased by 26 percent
since 2003, primarily due to a risk-sharing arrangement
with the federal government, whereby the Pentagon makes up the
difference for costs past the threshold of solvency. If not for
this subsidization of contracting, the IPS estimates, Health Net
would be running in the red.
The Pentagon has also outsourced intelligence collecting, paramilitary-style
training, and management of unsavory and illegal detention facilities.
The second-biggest executive pay increase went to Anteon International
CEO George Kampf, whose company is responsible for training Coalition
troops in prisoner interrogation techniques. According to the
financial watchdog group CorpWatch, many of the interrogators
working at facilities infamous for torture, including Guantánamo
and Abu Ghraib, received their training through Anteon. CEO Kampfs
annual pay package rose from $600,000 before September 11, 2001,
to $9 million last year.
The US oil industry has also conspicuously benefited from the
war in Iraq, at the expense of the lives tens of thousands of
Iraqis and the livelihoods of millions. Within the US, ordinary
workers are struggling with drastically higher retail gasoline
and residential fuel prices. Meanwhile, chief executives at the
fifteen largest American oil companies have received record pay
in the years since the war on terror was declared.
According to the IPS, these top CEOs claimed an average $32.7
million in compensation last year, 518 times the annual wage of
an average oil industry worker. The highest paid executive was
William Greehey of top refiner Valero Energy, with $95.2 million.
The lowest-paid oil industry worker for which the Bureau of Labor
Statistics keeps statistics, a site construction worker, would
have to work for 4,279 years before earning as much as CEO Greehey
made last year.
Greehey was followed by Occidental Petroleum executive Ray
R. Irani, who took in $84 million, and outgoing ExxonMobil CEO
Lee Raymond, who reported $69.7 million. Together, the top 15
saw average pay increases of more than 50 percent in 2005 over
2004.
The Center for Responsive Politics, which tracks lobbying and
contributions, reported that the oil industry contributed more
than $2.6 million to the reelection campaign of George Bush in
2004. The next highest contribution, worth $305,610, was to the
pro-war campaign of Democratic opponent John Kerry. Along with
a number of predominantly Southern Republican senators who received
large sums from the industry, Bush and Kerry have promoted legislation
to serve the interests of big oil, including unserious environmental
policies emphasizing voluntary compliance and incentives, deregulation,
and in the longer term, conquest of the Middle East.
Last year, ExxonMobil recorded $36 billion in profits, the
largest ever recorded. Like all major oil companies in the aftermath
of Hurricane Katrina, ExxonMobil seized on the destruction of
the Gulf Coast and the damage to rigs and refineries in the region
as a pretense for extreme gouging. CEO Raymond, called to testify
before Congress in the face of public outrage, denied profiteering
and defended the record profits. He reiterated two persistent
lies: that salaries enjoyed by the upper crust were hard earned
and justly deserved, and that price hikes were the uncontrollable
result of supply and demand.
At the end of the year, Raymond retired, taking nearly $70
million with him for 2005. A few months later, he was awarded
a retirement packageincluding a million dollar consulting
contract, security, car and driver, use of a corporate jet, and
nearly a quarter million dollars in country club feesreportedly
worth nearly $400 million.
Overall in 2005, the oil industry netted over $140 billion,
more than three-quarters of which went to the top five oil companies.
So far 2006 has been yet another record-breaking year. ExxonMobils
second quarter profits were $10.36 billion, 36 percent higher
than those of the same period last year.
With so much market share and so much of a critical resource
dominated by a handful of corporations, oil companies can effectively
shape the market to maximize their profits. The working class
is held hostage with arbitrary price increases and artificially
suppressed supplies. Currently the Energy Information Administration
estimates that American refineries are operating at an average
86 percent capacity, resulting in gasoline production rates of
24 million fewer barrels per day than a year ago.
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