How overpaid CEOs hurt uspattern

By Kieran Cuadras

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CEO pay has been skyrock­eting for years now, fueled in part by tax cuts for corporations and ultra wealthy individuals. That’s not just unfair to ordi­nary workers or taxpayers — it’s dangerous for our entire economy.

I’ve seen firsthand how these CEO pay practices incentivize the very worst kinds of corpo­rate misbehavior.

Remember the 2016 “phony accounts” scandal at Wells Fargo? Executives relentlessly pressured employees to meet extreme sales quotas, leading them to create millions of fraud­ulent accounts without clients’ consent.

As these fake accounts grew, the CEO of Wells Fargo at the time, John Stumpf, raked in bigger and bigger bonuses. Af­ter the scandal blew up, regula­tors hit Stumpf with fines totaling $20 million — only a small dent in the estimated $130 million he walked away with in compensation when he re­signed.

This is just one of countless stories of CEOs taking reckless actions to pump up their own paychecks while putting their employees and the general pub­lic at risk. We’ve seen the same pattern behind the opioid cri­sis, the 2008 financial crash, the toxic train derailment in East Palestine, Ohio, and more. But it’s the story I know best.

I started my career at Wells Fargo over 22 years ago — first as a teller, then as a branch manager, and later as an inves­tigator in the department that handles misconduct allegations.

I would like to be able to say that things changed after the accounts scandal. Unfortunate­ly, Wells Fargo’s current CEO, Charles Scharf, continues to cut corners in ways that put cus­tomers at risk.

Last year, we found out about a plan to cut costs by outsourc­ing jobs from our investigations department to India, where, in an ironic twist, we reviewed human rights complaints from Wells Fargo employees forced to stay at work even after falling ill. We were concerned not only about losing our jobs but about how this might put our clients’ private information at risk — a particular concern for our many active-duty military clients.

Wells Fargo has also gutted their risk and complaint depart­ments. They use shortcuts to create the illusion of fewer com­plaints, but in reality they are closing many cases prematurely rather than properly investigat­ing. And, believe it or not, cli­ents are still filing complaints about unauthorized accounts.

Like Stumpf, Charles Scharf appears to also see his job as a way to further maximize short-term profits to benefit top ex­ecutives and wealthy sharehold­ers. While slashing thousands of U.S. jobs, Scharf received a compensation package in 2024 worth a staggering $31.2 mil­lion.

Under Scharf’s leadership, Wells Fargo also spent over $73 billion on stock buybacks be­tween 2019 and 2023. This is a financial maneuver that ar­tificially inflates executives’ stock-based pay while siphon­ing resources from worker pay or improving services.

My department decided to form a union last year so we would have more power to im­prove Wells Fargo’s practices. But the bank is still unlawfully refusing to recognize or bargain with our union.

It’s time for our political lead­ers to step up and do some­thing about a CEO pay system that rewards executives with obscenely large paychecks for practices that harm workers and the broader economy.

The current tax debate offers a good opportunity. Republicans are calling for even more corpo­rate tax breaks, which, based on past experience, will make the rich richer but do nothing for ordinary working people.

Instead, Congress should pass bills that have been introduced to tax corporations with huge gaps between their CEO and worker pay and to increase an existing tax on stock buybacks. These bills would encourage companies to focus on long-term prosperity and stability rather than simply making wealthy ex­ecutives and shareholders even richer.

In the meantime, Wells Fargo employees will continue to fight to unionize so they can do their part to make the bank better for the rest of us — the workers, customers, and the communi­ties it serves.

Kieran Cuadras is a former Wells Fargo employee currently work­ing as a family caregiver and union activist in Sacramento, Califor­nia. This op-ed was distributed by OtherWords.org.

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