
The recent financial crisis has created a public outcry over top-executive pay packages and has led to calls for reform of executive pay in Europe and the US. The current controversy is not the first - nor will it be the last - time that executive compensation has sparked outrage and led to regulation on both sides of the Atlantic. This volume compares US and European CEOs to trace the evolution of executive compensation, its controversies and its resulting regulations. It shows that many features of current executive compensation practices reflect the, often-unintended, consequences of regulatory responses to perceived abuses in top-executive pay, which frequently stem from relatively isolated events or situations. Regulation creates unintended (and usually costly) side effects and it is often driven by political agendas rather than shareholder value. Improvements in executive compensation are more likely to come from stronger corporate governance, and not through direct government intervention.The volume also examines the effects of incentive schemes and the patterns of performance related pay both within and across countries. It documents a number of empirical regularities and discusses whether government should intervene to support the implementation of incentive pay schemes. It argues that it makes little sense to undertake reform without detailed simulations of the effect on the economy under alternative economic scenarios, based on sound analysis and extensive discussion with labour, management, and government decision-makers.
This volume investigates the efficacy of government intervention in executive compensation and the broader economic implications of performance-related pay structures. The authors, Claudio Lucifora, Kevin J. Murphy, and Tito Boeri, utilize comparative data from the United States and Europe to analyze how regulatory responses to executive pay controversies often produce unintended and costly consequences. They argue that corporate governance improvements are superior to direct government mandates and emphasize the necessity of rigorous economic simulation before implementing policy reforms.
What You Will Find
Experts recognize this report as a foundational text for understanding the intersection of labor economics and corporate governance policy. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the authors' reliance on empirical evidence to challenge common regulatory assumptions.
Page Count:
320
Publication Date:
2013-05-19
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0199669805
ISBN-13:
9780199669806
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