Just yesterday Toyota was in the news. They're not doing "just fine".
They are making money... less than they might like, but in the black nonetheless. Thus, they are doing fine.
Just yesterday Toyota was in the news. They're not doing "just fine".
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,975422-2,00.htmlYeah, and their economy sucks worse than ours. Well, ok, most of the European countries have horrible economies.
That said, I couldn't find anything on Japanese CEOs pay rates. It's not listed Forbes, nor Wiki, nor any of the translated Japanese pages I looked at.
If you find anything, let me know. I'm curious too.
Andy;78098]You don't care alright. You don't understand anything about cost of production at all, and have proven it repeatedly. If you don't care, then stop bothering us with your stupidity.
Do I need to get you a dictionary? Labor + material = cost of production. If cost of production is less than the value of the product, does it matter what the CEO pay is? Let's pretend that CEO has a salary of ZERO.
If labor + material > value of product sold... then explain to me how a CEO getting zero is going to help? Show me Top Gun. You show me how that helps. How is that going to get cost of production lower than income?
IT IS NOT! How the heck did you ever were able to run your own business is beyond me. I'd sure never invest in you. Go back to high school and learn some basic economics.
Right, you can't prove it's a better car. Thanks for admitting you can't. "seems" is subjective. You made a quantifiable statement, that a subjective word "seems" does not prove.
In short, liberalism is what caused all the problems we now face.
"In short, liberalism is what caused all the problems we now face."
Here's the winner of the most absurd, ignorant and deep denial post of the year.
A most piquant critique of European economies.
The pain being felt in Europe was caused in the States.
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,975422-2,00.html
"Although General Motors', Ford's and Chrysler's combined losses totaled $7.5 billion last year, their top executives were together paid $5.3 million. Their counterparts at Toyota, Nissan and Honda collectively made $1.8 million."
About a factor of 3 higher for US. But it is not clear if this just the salary without stock options, bonuses, etc.
Japan's biggest bank by market capitalization, paid a total of $8.1 million for 14 top executives in the fiscal year ended March 31, according to a regulatory filing.
But at Morgan Stanley, in which MUFG acquired a 21% stake in September, John Mack, the chief executive, alone took home five times that amount -- $41.4 million -- in the year ended Nov. 30, 2006.
Only idiots disagree with Andy.
Hooray, you let people call me all sorts and then step in and pick on me even though that is not an insult.
Your prejudice as a moderator is a joke
Go and **** yourself
Hooray, you let people call me all sorts and then step in and pick on me even though that is not an insult.
Your prejudice as a moderator is a joke
Go and **** yourself