True, it doesn't run itself. Deere needs welders, CNC operators, drivers, etc. All of these people bring a skill that the is critical to operating the company, same as managing and overseeing the company is a skill that the CEO brings.
As you say, $14.5M is a drop in the bucket for JD to pay someone with management skills. My question is again, why are those skill deemed so much more valuable than a welder or a machinist? What justifies a 240:1 pay ratio between the CEO and the base level employee?
I get what you are saying and cannot adequately defend that type of CEO salary. But points to consider:
- I think you need a
very talented individual to set the tone for the company. They make a lot a very strategic decisions that most of us would be less than qualified to make.
- I believe that most CEO's spend way more time on company business that the average employee. For a company like John Deere, that likely entails a lot of travel which, after X number of weeks on the road, is not 'fun'
- I think that Ben & Jerry's tried to hire a CEO a few years ago with lower than normal pay/incentives and they couldn't find anyone worthy to apply
- At some point the CEO salaries are like professional athletes - it isn't about what you make, but how that compares to the other CEOs and the ego that goes with it.
- Some of the reported salary is somewhat exaggerated - I can't speak to JD, but I presume that there is base salary, bonuses, and stock options that can be all rolled up into one giant number. I wish they would report out the buckets of those individuals for more transparency.
- The impact that a CEO of a company has on the company itself is way more than the impact of any give welder, CNC operator, driver, etc.
I don't believe that just anyone can be a CEO - education, experience, aptitude (and luck) all play into it. But, as I noted above, I cannot defend the current ratio of CEO:Laborer salaries.