Executive Pay: Who should decide? In a recent editorial in the Seattle Times‚ the editors complained that the executives of a public company‚ Simon Property Group‚ should have their salaries determined by the shareholders. Among the many things wrong with this piece is first‚ how do shareholders know anything about the performance of the executives in question? They don’t. They don’t work beside them on any kind of basis. They do not know what kind of challenges the company faced and whether the
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ISSN 1045-6333 HARVARD JOHN M. OLIN CENTER FOR LAW‚ ECONOMICS‚ AND BUSINESS EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION AS AN AGENCY PROBLEM Lucian Arye Bebchuk and Jesse M. Fried Discussion Paper No. 421 04/2003 Harvard Law School Cambridge‚ MA 02138 The Center for Law‚ Economics‚ and Business is supported by a grant from the John M. Olin Foundation. This paper can be downloaded without charge from: The Harvard John M. Olin Discussion Paper Series: http://www.law.harvard.edu/programs/olin_center/ The
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more aware of corporate executive compensation plans. Executive compensation has been an on-going issue for many years. There has been a great amount of controversy over how executives’ pay structure is designed and who judges‚ oversees and determines executives’ pay. As the scales get tipped on what executives are getting paid versus employee standard wages‚ the public is always on the watch for the next corporate scandal. Boards are always challenged by what executives’ pay should be based off
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COMMENT EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION DURING ECONOMIC TURMOIL Student[1] I. INTRODUCTION The economic downturn in late 2008 brought forth the resurgence of an interesting topic - executive compensation. This topic was bound to bring much controversy as a result of the dramatic increase in executive compensation over the last decade[2] and the recent massive failure of many large companies.[3] Adding to the public interest was the 2008 United States Presidential Election‚ which
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MEANING OF EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION Executive Compensation is defined as a financial compensation received by an executive of a firm. It typically includes elements like salary‚ bonuses‚ shares‚ stocks benefits etc. In simpler words it is a legal agreement between two consenting adult parties. It is an important aspect of Corporate Governance and is determined by the board of directors. In spite of being voluntary agreement these compensation benefits are condemned of being unjust and non transparent
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received $203 million as executive compensation. Although this award was inflated by Eisner ’s exercise of stock options‚ many examples of compensation in millions and tens of millions raise questions on how CEOs should be paid. Critics dispute that CEOs are deserving of their pay. CEOs downsize companies or perform badly‚ yet continue to draw a substantial salary. Unlike low level managers‚ it seems there is no formula for executive compensation. The disparity between the executive pay in US and that
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Corporate Finance A Short Summary On Executive Compensation as an Agency Problem INTRODUCTION: This paper is briefly written on some important elements and points depicting the involvement of the managerial power over the executive compensation. This paper not only illustrates the problems created by the managerial power or the agency problem in between the managers and the shareholders but also reflects that’s the executive compensation is a problem by itself. Issues that have been focused
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Executive Summary The purpose of an executive summary is to summarize a report. Executive summaries are written for executives who most likely do not have time to read the complete document. Therefore‚ the executive summary must cover the major points and be detailed enough to mirror the content yet concise enough for an executive to understand the substance without reading the entire report. An executive summary differs from an abstract. Readers use an abstract to decide whether to read the complete
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Women Executives Even though women constitute 40% of all executives and administrative posts (up from 24% in 1976)‚ they are still restricted mostly to the middle and lower positions‚ and the senior levels of management are almost entirely male domains. A 1990 study of the top Fortune 500 companies by Mary Ann Von Glinow of the University of Southern California‚ showed that "women were only 2.6% of corporate officers (the vice presidential level up)." Of the Fortune Service 500‚ only 4.3%
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Top Executive Compensation Packages In the job market‚ while employees select their employers‚ employers also select their employees. One of the most important elements that employers might take into consideration is salary. Executive salary could be classified into two groups: the short-term salary and the long-term salary. Short-term salary mainly includes wage‚ insurance‚ welfare and bonuses. Stock incentive is one of the modern long-term salary types and the incentive system is used to solve
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