Getting aroud the 'crackdown' on exec pay - Top Stocks Blog - MSN Money
 
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Getting aroud the 'crackdown' on exec pay

Posted Sep 30 2008, 02:48 PM by admin
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This post is by MSN Money columnist Michael Brush:

Earlier this week House leaders boasted that they added tough measures to the latest version of the financial rescue plan to crack down on excessive pay for executives.

But once again, it looks more like a public relations blitz designed to please the constituents back home rather than a real reform that would have a true impact. (See a related post here.)

Let’s take two of the provisions that got talked up the most: a 20% tax on golden parachutes for execs at any banks that get bailed out and the elimination of corporate tax deductions on executive base pay over $500,000 a year.

That sounds great. But it’s pretty much worthless because banks can still do what they have always done here. They can still pick up the tab on that extra 20% tax on golden parachutes. And they can still simply choose to take the hit on the taxes on base pay over $500,000.

Banks -- like many companies -- have routinely done both of these things for years. There’s no reason to think they wouldn’t continue to get around the so called “limits” in the latest bail out proposal which is likely to get voted on again later this week.

There are other serious shortcomings with measures designed to supposedly cap executive pay at banks getting bail outs, says Paul Hodgson, an executive comp expert at the Corporate Library. He sums up the problems in a report released Tuesday called “Executive Compensation Reform by the Back Door: Pay Provisions in the Bailout Plan.”

Lawmakers, for example, say measures in the bill would limit incentive pay that encourage excessive risk-taking, and even impose outright bans on golden parachutes.

While those provisions are in there, they would only apply to banks in which the government takes an equity stake. “As soon as the stake has been sold, these limits can safely be ignored,” says Hodgson.

Plus, there’s little or no definition of the type of "excessive risk" pay that would be limited, or the limits themselves, says Hodgson.

Another feature, a "claw back" provision forcing executives to cough up incentive pay earned when accounting fraud puffed up earnings, are already covered in the Sarbanes Oxley Act.

What’s worse, lawmakers caved in to opposition to the pay crack down, in two key ways.

Earlier working versions of the House bill give shareholders access to the corporate proxy machinery. That would have made it a lot cheaper for them to run their own candidates for board seats -- candidates who might be better watchdogs over executive pay. That’s now gone. So is a provision that would have given shareholders "say on pay" votes at banks getting bail outs.

The pity here is that by removing these provisions, lawmakers took away two measures that might have started to get at the root issue here: Executives at banks had perverse pay incentives that encouraged them to pump up earnings by doing risky things like writing too many subprime mortgages, or owning debt instruments backed by those risky mortgages.

"There should be no doubt that executive compensation lies at the root of the current financial crisis," says Hodgson. But by taking out these two measures, the House has removed the teeth from pay reform in the bail out bill and replaced them with "a set of very ill-fitting dentures."

Related reading:

Bailout, shmailout. Executive pay still safe.

Comments

 

Once again corporate america is buying legislation and the american people will be forced to finance it. Government fear tatics that have worked in the past are being employed. I suspect that this Bailout is a scam that was created by the Bush administration and Wallstreet to make a Trillion dollar money grab before the end of his term. Instead of large salaries and severance pay for CEO and managers give them huge fines and prison time. I fear the taxpayer will left with the burden of recovery and the criminals will walk.

Let's make a new tax bracket for those making over $1 Million a year.  Include salary, bonus and stock options.  Tax them at 50%.  As for the election and our Congress we should vote "None of the Above"--they all need to go.  The PACs are handing out money to all of Congress.  They have enough perks as it stands.

It's sad that our political leaders think so little of the American people.  I don't think any Amercian felt the position our leaders took on Corporate pay and greed had any merit.  We all assumed there would be enough loop holes that the provision in the bill would be toothless.  Afterall, they are the guys donating to the campaigns for these elected officials.  Why are they so concerned with the managers of these compaines that fail?  They should limit their pay to some multiple of the average pay for everyone in the company and totally eliminate golden parachutes of any kind.  If a manager does his job he will be well paid. The government should put a cap on Corporate pay for any public traded company and enfore it once the provision has been established.   It doesn't surprise me that Paulson is concerned about his buddy's pay, afterall Paulson is a product of Wall Steet.  When history's written the American taxpayer will take in the rear just as they have throughout our history.  Corporate America will continue to focus on moving jobs overseas and their counterparts in our government will support their effors and conduct business as usual.  

Love American but disgusted with Politician, Corporations and the unethical leadership in both.

Words can not express the sheer enormity of my anger at the current state of affairs.

To say I wouldn't mind hanging a few of them execs would be to say the least. :\

I like the idea of giving the bailout to the citizens, the heck with a 300 dollar rebate check give every american 45000, that will pay off credit cards, catch up house payments etc.  Then banks will be happy.  Next step would be for shareholders actually to be able to hold execs accountable, don't they have a fiduciary duty to the shareholders, so if the shareholders value is wiped out, should theirs be also?

We as a country worry so much about the Presidential Election but very few people get passionate about their Congressmen and women.  They are the ones making the rules.  The President can just say yes or no.  To change our government we need to change our government representatives.  I think they should all be fired and we should start over.  Although the President is the figurehead, it is the House and Senate that need major revamping.  

Also, when a company fails and shareholders loose all their money, why do the people that caused that to happen get anything?  

This hole deal "stinks"! It is just one more example of "the good ol' boy" system. I can't believe any one person can be worth as much as some of them get paid. If they were out here, in the real world where we have to actually perform to keep employment, they would starve . But, I guess we must be sheep, otherwize, as stock holders, we would have stood up long ago and put limits on these things.

It's more of the same rhetoric from Henry and his band of Stalinist, I think its time the American people get from behind their (what's left of them) flat screens and get out the vote. The bailout is not a show stopper and I am against it, (Paulson has $100 m in Goldman Sachs stock) but you had better start stocking up on soup, oatmeal, and spam because we are in for the long haul.

Those at the bottom can not afford to lose what they have...Where were all these funds while we cut school/college funding-medicare for our elderly and our children?  Where was all this money while mom/pop lost their store?  Where was all that money being funneled while regular working class people were losing their homes?  Whatever your position on the issue of this "bailout", the money should trickle up this time Mr. Bush.  Those at the top have financial resources available to bounce back if the"bailout funds" dry up by the time it is their turn to receive a sum.  America is strong because of it's PEOPLE as a whole, not a handful of politicians and ceos.  

Why doesn't the public go after the people who are responsible for the exorbitant salaries of the executives?  The BOARD OF DIRECTORS!  They determine the pay package for the CEOs and CFOs.

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