The key issue to New Hampshire citizens should be the huge and continuing Income Inequality Expansion which is at the core of many critical problems the US faces.
Thus I will be doing research and making posts on the average pay raise per year that the Top-Tier Executives of New Hampshire Companies were rewarded with in the past five to ten years.
The first New Hampshire Company I am addressing here is Fitness Center (mostly Franchisor) Company Planet Fitness Inc.
From annual compensation information contained in Company Proxy Statement filings with the SEC, the chart at the very bottom below shows Planet Fitness Inc's Top-Tier Executives Annual Total Compensation for each of two consecutive full years of employment for the past four years since its IPO in 2015.
Planet Fitness Inc's Top-Tier Executives Average Pay Raise was a blistering 40.7% per year for the last four years since its 2015 IPO. Further, a large part of this compensation is related to equity compensation and Planet Fitness Inc's common stock market price has appreciated by 370% from its August 6, 2015 IPO date closing market price of $16.00 per share to today's high market price of $75.18 per share.
The only highly effective US Government law enacted by either party in the past decade that has substantially reduced income inequality expansion is Obamacare and the political right is continually trying to repeal and replace it and three of the top four Democratic Presidential candidates now leading in the polls are effectively running as their principal issue to do in essence precisely the same thing ..... repeal and replace Obamacare ..... but to do it with either a pure or a version of Medicare For All. The pure Medicare For All advocated by both Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren and which was co-sponsored in a US Senate bill by Kamala Harris is off-the-charts enormously expensive and would take up an enormous amount of wasted time with no positive result since it has no chance of getting passed legislatively. Just given their near-sighted stance on Medicare For All, if the Democratic nominee is any of the three of them, it will be extremely difficult for any of them to beat Trump in the general election. It is that simple.
My objective is to get a better handle on just why the US and particularly here New Hampshire has such massive continuing Income Inequality Expansion ..... it appears to be predominantly about the relative long-term annual pay raise percentages for the executives of a Company vs the many non-executive employees of a Company, coupled with the stock price appreciation subsequent to the time the company executives were rewarded in their pay with stock equity compensation.To fix Income Inequality driven mainly by Company and its Board of Director choices on Percentage Annual Pay Raises, the US Government should step in and pass wisely-designed, simple but effective Fair Pay Raise Income Inequality Narrowing Company tax incentives for rewarding non-executive employees with fair pay increases ..... the carrot ..... and Company tax disincentives for rewarding executive employees with clearly excessively high pay increases ..... the stick. I am certain ..... it is simple math ..... that this tax proposal would be very effective in substantially reducing the huge income inequality expansion that has occurred for decades in annual percentage pay raises between company executives and the rest of the company employees.
And the continuing annual net tax revenues raised by the US Government here should be set up in a separate fund to be used only for wise additional income inequality narrowing initiatives. This fund should be run by an outside group made up entirely of minorities harmed the most by Income Inequality Expansion of the past decades .....all women, all blacks, all Latinos, all other non-white people, all past and present union members, all LGBTQ, all non-employee contract workers and all middle and lower income people of all ages, including those retired.
Also, the US Government should require all US Corporate Boards to include at least one worker representative and to exclude any Company Executive.
FYE | FYE | FYE | FYE | FYE | FYE | FYE | FYE | |||||
Dec | Dec | Dec | Dec | Dec | Dec | Dec | Dec | |||||
Planet Fitness | 2018 | 2017 | 2017 | 2016 | 2016 | 2015 | 2015 | 2014 | ||||
Top-Tier | Total | Total | Total | Total | Total | Total | Total | Total | ||||
Executive | Comp | Comp | Comp | Comp | Comp | Comp | Comp | Comp | ||||
$ 000s | $ 000s | $ 000s | $ 000s | $ 000s | $ 000s | $ 000s | $ 000s | |||||
Christopher Rondeau CEO | 4,365 | 4,084 | 4,084 | 2,497 | 2,497 | 1,053 | 1,053 | 1,088 | ||||
Dorvin Lively CFO | 2,498 | 1,777 | 1,777 | 780 | 780 | 739 | 739 | 729 | ||||
Craig Miller Chief Digital & Info Officer | N/A | N/A | ||||||||||
Roger Chacko Chief Commercial Officer | N/A | N/A | ||||||||||
Rob Sopkin Former Chief Development Officer | N/A | N/A | ||||||||||
Richard Moore Former General Counsel | N/A | N/A | 521 | 484 | 484 | 455 | ||||||
Totals | 6,863 | 5,861 | 5,861 | 3,277 | 3,798 | 2,276 | 2,276 | 2,272 | ||||
Annual % Change vs Prior Year | 17.1% | 78.9% | 66.9% | 0.2% | ||||||||
4 Year Average Per Year % Change | 40.7% |