According to our lame US media this should have been a slam-dunk - TopicsExpress



          

According to our lame US media this should have been a slam-dunk win: SWISS REJECT PLAN TO CAP MANAGERS PAY - Associated Press - By GEIR MOULSON Swiss voters soundly rejected on Sunday a proposal to limit the pay of companies highest-paid managers to 12 times that of their lowest-paid workers, a plan that business leaders had warned could weaken the prosperous nations economy. A projection by the gfs.bern polling agency based on partial counting showed voters shooting down the plan by a margin of 66 percent to 34. Initiatives need a majority of both voters and cantons (states) to pass in a referendum; by Sunday afternoon, results from 20 of the 26 cantons were in and all had voted against. Sundays referendum came after voters in a March vote voiced anger at perceived corporate greed by deciding to boost shareholders say on executive pay and ban one-off bonuses known as golden hellos and goodbyes. However, the new 1:12 initiative from Switzerlands Young Socialists calling for a fixed legal cap on pay appeared to be a step too far for centrist and conservative voters. Switzerland is home to global business players such as pharmaceutical companies Novartis and Roche; insurance groups Zurich and Swiss Re; and banks UBS and Credit Suisse. Backers of the 1:12 initiative argued that imposing a legal limit on salaries would ensure greater fairness while still giving top bosses the chance to earn more money than, for example, government ministers. But Swiss business leaders argued it would weaken the nations competitiveness, make it harder to attract top talent and likely prompt some companies to move executives abroad. Opponents included Sepp Blatter, the Swiss president of world soccers governing body FIFA, who argued that it would have the side-effect of seriously damaging Swiss soccer. Of course were disappointed, Young Socialist leader David Roth told Swiss television. Our opponents succeeded in making people afraid, he said, though he insisted that there was no future for an economic system based on salaries in the millions, on financial speculation. The head of Switzerlands employers association said he was greatly relieved. This is an important decision for Switzerland as a business location, Valentin Vogt said. The people have decided clearly that setting salaries in this country is not a matter for the state.
Posted on: Sun, 24 Nov 2013 14:54:42 +0000

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