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Largest US Public Companies Fuel Increasing Inequality Crisis, Finds Oxfam


Today, Oxfam, the global organization fighting inequality to end poverty and injustice, launched the Corporate Inequality Footprint (CIF), one of the only holistic, data-driven assessments of the largest 200 public companies' contributions to inequality in the United States. The analysis found that 90% ? or more than $1.1 trillion ? of the combined $1.25 trillion in net profits for those companies are paid out to wealthy shareholders. Simultaneously, only 5% ? or 10 of the 200 companies ? publicly support a living wage, while four of the 200 have CEO-worker pay ratios over 1500:1.

The first-of-its-kind analysis, which looks at publicly disclosed data from the largest US public companies, aims to shine a brighter light on corporations' inequality footprints and empower investors to engage them on the policies and behaviors that fuel our inequality crisis.

The research found that inequality is part of the fabric of big business. Power and money remain concentrated with those already benefiting from the inequality machine in the US, driven by a combination of low worker wages, high CEO pay, record profits, and expensive share buybacks, among other factors.

Of the largest US companies, those with low median employee salaries tend to have high CEO-worker pay ratios, with four companies trending above a 1,500:1 ratio?Jabil (1,864:1), McDonalds (1,745:1), TJX Corporations (1,604:1), and The Coca-Cola Company (1,594:1).

"The corporate culture of maximizing profits at all costs is clearly driving the inequality crisis by lining the pockets of the already wealthy at the expense of our people and planet," said Irit Tamir, Senior Director of Oxfam America's Private Sector Department. "Big business' priority to make the rich richer fails to recognize the financial materiality and long-term economic risks of inequality. Publicly disclosed data shows that the concentration of corporate wealth and power stifles both economic participation and the wellbeing of the people who make such extraordinary corporate profits possible. We urge policymakers, investors, and other corporate stakeholders to take seriously the dangerous impacts of unrestrained inequality and their power to hold corporate America accountable."

Highlights of Oxfam's initial findings and analysis include:

To make measurable progress against the inequality crisis, Oxfam calls for stronger disclosure requirements that can better expose the inequality machine in US business practices. This pilot assessment included indicators where sufficient public data remains unavailable, pointing to a need for more thorough public reporting to inform strong standards, advance corporate reform and alternative business models, and empower policymakers and the investor community to leverage inequality as a meaningful performance metric to which they can hold corporations accountable.

Download the media briefing here.
Download the investor guide here.
Download the research report here.

Methodology

The pilot CIF analysis coalesces publicly available information from each of the 200 largest public companies in America using mandatory and voluntary company disclosures. This includes financial data from 2018 through 2022, as well as qualitative details from 2021?the most complete recent years on record for public disclosures at the time the data was gathered. Data sources include 10-K filings, proxy statements, company websites, and other public information databases. Each company is analyzed across four pillars through which corporations impact inequality?People, Power, Profits, and Planet?which factor in 15 subtopics and 80 corresponding indicators, including pay equity, board diversity, climate action, and more.

Oxfam is a global organization that fights inequality to end poverty and injustice. We offer lifesaving support in times of crisis and advocate for economic justice, gender equality, and climate action. We demand equal rights and equal treatment so that everyone can thrive, not just survive. The future is equal. Join us at oxfamamerica.org.

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In the absence of public company-specific living wage benchmarks, we set the benchmark at $20 an hour (with consideration of retirement, childcare, and healthcare). This is based on the population adjusted mean (provided by Living Wage for Us).


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