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Executive Compensation, Trends, Executive Compensation Survey, Plans

Executive Compensation Introduction


February 2008

How much should a CEO or the top executive officers of a publicly-owned corporation be paid?  What is a “fair” compensation?  Especially when corporations are laying off thousands of workers and outsourcing work to distant lands?  When the middle class is under attack – see CNN Lou Dobbs’ commentary on this?  The issue of exec comp has become a burning question with an array of forces on all sides of the issue.  When the stock market is doing well and “all boats are rising,” the issue is not as much in focus as when companies (or a single firm) is underperforming and the executive compensation is seemingly out of whack.  Out of control. Disproportionate to performance.  Unrelated to reality.  And other battle cries by investor activists, public officials, journalists, advocate organizations, etc.

Consider the case of Home Depot, where the share price fell as the CEO’s pay package rose.  Saying goodbye to the CEO, Mr. Nardelli, cost HD more than $200 million.  Consider the exiting of the Wonderful Wizards of Wall Street, and their departure comp packages – totaling in the hundreds of millions’ of dollars – as the wreckage they’ve left behind (in the form of sub prime disaster loan portfolios) causes real pain on Wall Street, and on Main Street.  We still don’t know the damage they caused with their financial wizardry – but the carnage is felt when home foreclosure rates increase dramatically, as they have over the past year.

So – what is a fair price for the Top Man (and a tiny handful of Top Women)?  You’ll find news, commentary, research and other useful content here in this Hot Topic subsection of Accountability Central, as well as in various content sections and subsections.  (See Corporate Governance, Shareowner Activism, Socially Responsible Investment, and other silos.)

Consider this as you formulate your own positions on the pay issues:

  • Aristotle believed (2400 years ago) that no Citizen of Greece, the first western democracy, should be paid more than seven (7) times that of the lowest earner.
  • The military organizes its service members in two classifications (officer and enlisted ranks), and has a well-structured pay scale (grade, steps in grade etc.) for everyone from privates to general officers and admirals.  Eight pay grades seem to cover one of the largest public institutions in America – the armed services.
  • For many years, especially in regulated industries such as airlines, telephone companies and electric utilities, the military model could often be found. The ratio of pay, say at American Airlines in the regulatory format was $60,000 in 2008 dollars for the lower rank of manager and $600,000 for CEO (10-1) – how quaint!  And consider the disastrous state of airline pay ratios today, as service crumbles and CEO pay soars like the silver-winged jet aircraft!
  • Two decades ago the executive pay system (above) began to change dramatically, and the ratio of highest-to-lowest paid moved from 10-1, or 30-to-1, or 50-to-1 to 300-to-1 or more today.  (Some CEO’s make 1,000-to-one, comparing their pay package to the lowest salaried worker.) 
  • The total pay packages of the top ranked corporate officers are so complex that even board of directors – granting the goodies – cannot understand them.  (Is this good for shareowners, who are represented by the board of directors?)
  • Beginning in January 2007, companies had to report in depth on the total pay packages of the top five (5) highest ranked decision-makers in the corporation.  This is the “CD&A” – the SEC-mandated Compensation Disclosure & Analysis.  For the first time in theory everything is on the table now for inspection, including summaries in easy-to-understand charts.  The second year’s CD&A’s will be reaching shareowners soon.  The SEC’s analysis of the quality of the first year’s disclosure was not a happy time for many of the companies issuing their first CD&A.  Will improvements be made in the Year Two disclosures (covering compensation in 2007)?  Stay Tuned!
  • Finally, many proxy contests soon to become more visible – as shareowners exercise their rights to put non-ordinary business on the shareowner-wide voting ballot – many resolutions will refer directly to or indirectly involve senior executive compensation. 

Enough highlights and commentary – we invite you to follow the often-heated discussions and public debate on executive compensation here in the pages of Accountability Central.

The Editors

 

“…People will be accountable and responsible…”

President Barack Obama – on CEO Comp – February 4, 2009

Comments from Accountability-Central Users


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Sargent Sargent from Ireland

Wednesday, 29-07-09 06:25

Good evening. There are plenty of good five-cent cigars in the country. The trouble is they cost a quarter. What this country needs is a good five-cent nickel. Help me! I can not find sites on the: Use case of student registration system. I found only this - nhs jobs bristol. Financial institutions, non bank persons or entities whose principal functions include the lending, investing, or placement of funds or evidences of. Business software, business accounting business commercial finance tax preparation. With respect ;-), Sargent from Ireland.

 
 

 

 

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Latest on Executive Compensation



March 31, 2009 Sprint shares fall after company details executive compensation

Source:Dayton Business Journal

Sprint Nextel Corp. CEO Dan Hesse’s pay last year dropped by more than half as the company’s share price plummeted. Last year, Hesse received compensation valued at $15.46 million, according to a filing with the U.S. Securities...

March 30, 2009 Obama: I told bankers bonuses 'not acceptable'

Source:Reuters

U.S. President Barack Obama said on Sunday he told the chiefs of the biggest U.S. banks that bonuses are not acceptable while many Americans struggle to meet basic expenses in the midst of a severe recession.

March 30, 2009 A Smarter Way to Set CEO Pay

Source:Business Week

Let's make CEOs no different from any other employee. They'll be better paid, but most of that will be in the form of stock, not options

March 29, 2009 Planning perks for top execs are on the chopping block

Source:Investment News

As bailed-out financial institutions take more heat over the massive pay packages dished out to their executives, a key fringe benefit usually awarded to top officers — the financial planning perk — appears to be on the chopping...

March 29, 2009 Outrage, yes; tax law, no

Source:Investment News

The Obama administration and Congress should immediately halt any effort to assess a punitive tax on bonuses paid this year by companies that received bailout funds from the Troubled Asset Relief Program.

March 27, 2009 TSFG shareholders: Agreement good for corporate governance

Source:Charleston Regional Business Journal

One of the shareholders who sued The South Financial Group over former chairman and CEO Mack Whittle’s $17 million retirement package said he is willing to settle so the company can concentrate on “survival.” Although the...

March 26, 2009 Let shareholders vote on executive pay

Source:U.S. Rep. Gary Peters, Detroit News

When news broke that taxpayer-owned AIG was paying $165 million in bonuses to the very people who helped create the financial crisis, many expressed their outrage. It's not enough to talk about the egregiousness of these bonuses;...

March 26, 2009 Some at AIG Buck Efforts to Give Back Bonus Pay

Source:Wall Street Journal

Some American International Group Inc. employees, vilified for receiving bonuses amid the $173 billion bailout of their company, are fighting back. Wednesday, employees at the insurer gave a standing ovation for Jake DeSantis, an...

March 25, 2009 Geithner, Bernanke want executive pay standards

Source:Associated Press

Last week, Congress raged over employee bonuses paid by insurance conglomerate American International Group Inc. On Tuesday, lawmakers listened soberly as Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben...

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Source:USA Today

In a USA TODAY/Gallup Poll taken Saturday and Sunday, 69% of those surveyed say managers at the insurance giant who received a total of $165 million in bonuses should return all of money, while 13% say they should give half of it...

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