Executive pay levels
Executive pay is out of control. The High Pay
Commission (2011) recorded that in 1999 the aver-
age annual pay of chief executives in FTSE 100
companies was £1,234,983 compared with the
average annual employee pay of £17,803 – a multiple
of 69. Ten years later in 2009 the average pay of
chief executives was £3,747,000 compared with the
average pay for employees of £25,816 – a multiple
of 145. It is even worse in the United States where
in 1965 CEOs earned on average about twenty
times as much as their typical employee. They now
earn about two hundred and seventy times as much
(Surowiecki, 2013).
The High Pay Commission found evidence that
excessive high pay damages companies, is bad for
our economy and has negative impacts on society as
a whole. At its worst, excessive high pay bears little
relation to company success and is rewarding fail-
ure. The commission established that between 1998
and 2009 chief executive remuneration quadrupled
while share prices have declined. The remuneration
of chief executives of FTSE 100 companies rose by
6.7 per cent per year, while earnings per share fell
by 1 per cent per year over the same period.
It has been established by research (Conyon and
Leech, 1994; Gomez-Mejia and Balkin, 1992; Gregg
et al 1993) that there is no evidence that the huge
increases in pay have resulted in improved company
performance.
Why has executive pay grown so much?
The reasons for the growth in executive rewards
as explained by Dymond and Murlis (2009) are:
●
Agency theory: shareholders must structure
the CEO’s pay arrangements to reward
behaviours that increase shareholder wealth
– this is the most important reason. Agency
theory indicates that it is desirable to operate
a system of incentives for the agents
(directors or managers) of the principles
(owners) to motivate and reward acceptable
behaviour.
●
Tournament theory: the high rewards
received by CEOs have little to do with
what they deserve. Rather, the main purpose
of such rewards is to send signals to senior
managers to motivate them to compete for
the number one spot. Tournament theory
states that the highest prizes (pay) of all are
given to the person who wins the tournament
by getting the top job.
●
The changing nature of companies and the
increasing demands made on chief executives.
●
Star culture: the creation of the celebrity CEO.
●
The talent shortage.
●
Pay disclosure in annual reports leading to
demands from CEOs to achieve parity.
●
Peer group analysis – as Elson and Ferrere
(2012: 108) observed: ‘Boards typically
gravitate in fixing compensation to a set of
arbitrary targets – ie, the 50th, 75th, and
90th percentiles of peer group pay. A blind
reliance on these pay targets has resulted in
a mathematically based upward pay spiral.
This dynamic is popularly referred to as the
‘Lake Wobegon’ effect. [A phrase from the
Garrison Keeler book Lake Wobegon Days
referring to a situation in which all or nearly
all of a group claim to be above average].
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