OPINION
Schumer and Sanders: Limit Corporate Stock
Buybacks
Corporate self-indulgence has become an enormous
problem for workers and for the long-term strength of the economy.
Feb. 3,
2019
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/02/03/opinion/chuck-schumer-bernie-sanders.html
From the
mid-20th century until the 1970s, American corporations shared a belief that
they had a duty not only to their shareholders but to their workers, their
communities and the country that created the economic conditions and legal
protections for them to thrive. It created an extremely prosperous America for
working people and the broad middle of the country.
But over
the past several decades, corporate boardrooms have become obsessed with
maximizing only shareholder earnings to the detriment of workers and the
long-term strength of their companies, helping to create the worst level of
income inequality in decades.
One way in
which this pervasive corporate ethos manifests itself is the explosion of stock
buybacks.
So focused
on shareholder value, companies, rather than investing in ways to make their
businesses more resilient or their workers more productive, have been
dedicating ever larger shares of their profits to dividends and corporate share
repurchases. When a company purchases its own stock back, it reduces the number
of publicly traded shares, boosting the value of the stock to the benefit of
shareholders and corporate leadership.
Between
2008 and 2017, 466 of the S&P 500 companies spent around $4 trillion on
stock buybacks, equal to 53 percent of profits. An additional 40 percent of
corporate profits went to dividends. When more than 90 percent of corporate
profits go to buybacks and dividends, there is reason to be concerned.
This
practice of corporate self-indulgence is not new, but it’s grown enormously.
Fueled by the Trump tax cut, in 2018, United States corporations repurchased
more than $1 trillion of their own stock, a staggering figure and the highest
amount ever authorized in a single year.
This has
become an enormous problem for workers and for the long-term strength of the
economy for two main reasons.
First,
stock buybacks don’t benefit the vast majority of Americans. That’s because
large stockholders tend to be wealthier. Nearly 85 percent of all stocks owned
by Americans belong to the wealthiest 10 percent of households. Of course, many
corporate executives are compensated through stock-based pay. So when a company
buys back its stock, boosting its value, the benefits go overwhelmingly to
shareholders and executives, not workers.
Second,
when corporations direct resources to buy back shares on this scale, they
restrain their capacity to reinvest profits more meaningfully in the company in
terms of R&D, equipment, higher wages, paid medical leave, retirement
benefits and worker retraining.
It’s no
coincidence that at the same time that corporate stock buybacks and dividends
have reached record highs, the median wages of average workers have remained
relatively stagnant. Far too many workers have watched corporate executives
cash in on corporate stock buybacks while they get handed a pink slip.
Recently,
Walmart announced plans to spend $20 billion on a share repurchase program while
laying off thousands of workers and closing dozens of Sam’s Club stores. Using
a fraction of that amount, the company could have raised hourly wages of every
single Walmart employee to $15, according to an analysis by the Roosevelt
Institute.
Walmart is
not alone. Harley Davidson authorized a 15 million share stock-repurchase
around the same time it announced it would close a plant in Kansas City, Mo.
And Wells Fargo has spent billions on corporate stock buybacks while openly
plotting to lay off thousands of workers in the coming years.
At a time
of huge income and wealth inequality, Americans should be outraged that these
profitable corporations are laying off workers while spending billions of
dollars to boost their stock’s value to further enrich the wealthy few. If
corporations continue to purchase their own stock at this rate, income
disparities will continue to grow, productivity will suffer, the long-term
strength of companies will diminish — and the American worker will fall further
behind.
That is why
we are planning to introduce bold legislation to address this crisis. Our bill
will prohibit a corporation from buying back its own stock unless it invests in
workers and communities first, including things like paying all workers at
least $15 an hour, providing seven days of paid sick leave, and offering decent
pensions and more reliable health benefits.
In other
words, our legislation would set minimum requirements for corporate investment
in workers and the long-term strength of the company as a precondition for a
corporation entering into a share buyback plan. The goal is to curtail the
overreliance on buybacks while also incentivizing the productive investment of
corporate capital.
Some may
argue that if Congress limits stock buybacks, corporations could shift to
issuing larger dividends. This is a valid concern — and we should also
seriously consider policies to limit the payout of dividends, perhaps through
the tax code.
Why
wouldn’t it be better for our national economy if, instead of buying back
stock, corporations paid all of their workers better wages and provided good
benefits? Why should a company whose pension program is underfunded be able to
buy back stock before shoring up the pension fund?
Whichever
way a corporation chooses to invest in its workers, what’s clear to the vast
majority of Americans is that companies should devote resources to workers and
communities before buying back stock.
So, in this
Congress, the two of us will attempt to get a vote on legislation that demands
that corporations commit to addressing the needs of their workers and
communities before the interests of their wealthy stockholders.
The past
two years have been extremely disappointing for millions of workers. President
Trump promised the typical American household a $4,000 pay raise as he pushed
for his tax giveaway to the rich. The reality, however, is that from December
2017 to December 2018, real wages for average workers have gone up by just
$9.11 a week. Sadly, average workers are making less today than they made in
1973 after adjusting for inflation, while stock buybacks have skyrocketed to
record levels.
The time is
long overdue for us to create an economy that works for all Americans, not just
the people on top. Our legislation will be an important step in that direction.
Chuck Schumer
from New York is the Democratic leader in the Senate. Bernie Sanders is a
senator for Vermont.
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Correction:
Feb. 4, 2019
An earlier
version of this article misstated the percentage of profits that corporations
paid out in dividends from 2008 to 2017. It was around 40 percent, not
30 percent.
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