I have been reading a very interesting book on the redistribution of wealth over the last thirty years or so.
It got me to wondering if anyone on here could research pilot vs. CEO pay at AMR. Specifically, what did the top earning pilot in 1982 earn compared to the CEO at the time, with and without stock options (adjusted for inflation and anything else the economy dictated, tax breaks etc. and to compare those figures with 2012 pay for both.
If anyone has more time on their hands than any reasonable person should maybe you could compare the top 50 or 100 pilots vs. the top 50 or 100 upper management.
Moderators, this is meant to be an economics question not a political one.
It got me to wondering if anyone on here could research pilot vs. CEO pay at AMR. Specifically, what did the top earning pilot in 1982 earn compared to the CEO at the time, with and without stock options (adjusted for inflation and anything else the economy dictated, tax breaks etc. and to compare those figures with 2012 pay for both.
If anyone has more time on their hands than any reasonable person should maybe you could compare the top 50 or 100 pilots vs. the top 50 or 100 upper management.
Moderators, this is meant to be an economics question not a political one.