The 1980s were a fine time to be rich in America—but the 1990s were fabulous. And if you were a CEO or anose-ringed, dot-com entrepreneur, you were a figure of world-historical proportions, not merely a wealthmagnet, but a very example of the New Man to whom the New Economy was giving birth. Here’s the view from thetop: In 1990, average CEO "wages" were 85 times those of the average blue-collar employee. In the nextdecade, that ratio went from merely staggering to truly astronomical, winding up in 1999 at 475 to 1— agreater than fivefold increase in nine years. The CEO-to-worker income ratio in Japan, meanwhile, held steadyat 11 to 1, and in Britain—"the country," writes Thomas Frank, "most enamored of New Economyprinciples after the U.S. itself"—it was 24 to 1.