Tuesday, November 08, 2011

Archbishop of York attacks high-paid executives

Dr John Sentamu has attacked the salaries of top executives saying that huge differences between the rich and poor “weaken community life and make societies less cohesive”.

Archbishop Sentamu  said that excesses in the financial sector have helped to create huge inequalities in wealth, “demonstrating how scandalously unfair our society is”.

Writing in the Yorkshire Post, Dr Sentamu called for a change in public attitudes towards excessive personal wealth as profound and rapid as moves against racism, homophobia and sex discrimination in recent decades.

He said: “If they [FTSE 100 chief executives] have a responsibility to their staff, it is hard to imagine a more powerful way of telling someone that they are of little value than to pay them one-third of one per cent of your salary."

“Top pay has been found to bear little or no relation to company performance, but even if it did, isn’t the performance of a company dependent on the work and well-being of all its staff? Among the ill-effects of very large income differences between rich and poor are that they weaken community life and make societies less cohesive.”

The archbishop said: “But over last few decades the gains from economic growth have gone disproportionately to those who already have the most.”

Dr Sentamu called for a change of ethics regarding excessively high incomes and the accumulation of private wealth.

He said he had two suggestions.

The first was that “Queen’s honours” should not be given “to those who have already rewarded themselves handsomely”.

He said: “To have to choose between two coveted sources of honour and prestige would be salutary.”

The archbishop’s second suggestion was to crack down on tax avoidance, including a proposal to put a tick-box on tax forms to allow contributions to be made public.

He said: “Not to tick the box would suggest that you felt you had something to hide. Given the Government’s attempts to reduce the public spending deficit, each thousand pounds of tax avoided presumably means an additional thousand pounds ofcuts to public services on which the least well-off are particularly dependent.”

Dr Sentamu made no mention of the ongoing anti-capitalist demonstration outside St Paul’s 
Cathedral in his article.

The Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams, has expressed sympathy with demonstrators by supporting a “Robin Hood tax” on the banks.