Coug, the whole minimum wage debate has been going for years here in Australia as well, and fortunately past Australian governments have been quite good in keeping minimum wages increasing each year in line with CPI (consumer price index) increases each year. CPI has been roughly 2.5-3% per annual, and minimum wages have generally been 2-2.5% per annum... Admittedly minimum wage hasn't keep pace with CPI over the years, but is certainly not what's happened in the US.
Minimum wage in Australia for a full-time adult (18yr) employee is AU$17.29 per hour before tax. (casual employees get 25% more, as they don't get paid holidays, etc). And trust me, that's just barely enough to pay for essentials and some very minor luxuries... (current petrol prices are around AU$1.40 per litre, a ticket to the cinemas is AU$12 (cheap day), McDonalds Big Mac medium value meal is about AU$8.50, Chicken breast is about AU$10 pkg, a decent T-Bone steak about $20pkg, in my area, a rental house is about AU$380pw for a 3bedroom house, my personal average electricity bill is $500-600 per 3mths, just to give some price comparisons).
But back to the CEO vs minimum pay, I remember an article a few years ago about the rate of increase for the average CEO salary (fortune 500 companies) vs their lowest paid workers. During the late 40's-early 50's the CEOs salary was roughly 5-10x the lowest paid worker, but in the late 2000's was roughly 100-200x the lowest paid worker in most western countries. The few exceptions to the rule was Japan, Scandinavian countries and some of the other EU countries... But in general the people on top would vote for pay rises, and in some cases pay for their own pay-rises by sacking people! (Not directly, but indirectly... eg need to cut costs by 5% due to lower than expected income, layoff 5% of workforce, and at end of quarter they realise they actually made a profit to appease wall-street, and because they made a profit, they congratulate themselves with a payrise due the hard work they performed to demonstrate a profit in the last quarter, despite the fact the profit was generated by sacking people, and not increasing sales or market share...).
The big item in Australia with regards to CEO salaries, are the so-called golden-parachute clauses, in which in if they get fired for incompetence, they get a multi-million dollar payout! Mind you, for the person on minimum-wage in the warehouse stocking shelves, will be fired without any form of compensation! And if made redundant, will get 4 weeks pay + some further compensation if they've been with the company for than a few years...
I do agree, in a pure capitalist environment, there will never be a balance... But the Soviet systems failed as well. (I don't consider the system employed by the USSR to be a true communist system either).