Saturday, May 9, 2020

High CEO pay - low performance - The Chief Happiness Officer Blog

High CEO pay - low performance - The Chief Happiness Officer Blog To get results you must get a really good CEO. To get a really good CEO, you must pay a very high salary. Thats established wisdom. And its wrong! James Surowiecki wrote the excellent book The Wisdom of Crowds that showed how heterogeneous groups of people can be better at making decisions than individuals or groups of experts, and now hes taken a critical look at exhorbitant CEO salaries in this excellent article in the New Yorker. A quote: it?s becoming increasingly clear that, from a shareholder?s perspective, overpaid C.E.O.s aren?t just expensive; they?re downright destructive. One recent study of the market between 1992 and 2001 by economists at Rutgers and Penn State found that the more a C.E.O. was paid, relative to his peers, the more likely his company was to underperform in the stock market. The economist David Yermack, of N.Y.U., has found that companies that allow their C.E.O.s to use corporate jets for personal reasons fall short of market benchmarks by four per cent annually. There are myriad ways in which excessive or poorly designed pay packages can do damage. ?Golden parachutes,??? which guarantee executives huge payoffs if their companies are acquired, may encourage them to sell out even when the company would be better off remaining independent. Conversely, according to a study by the finance professors Jarrad Harford and Kai Li, very highly paid executives are more likely than their peers to make acquisitions, and to receive major financial rewards for doing so, even when the acquisition ends up destroying corporate value. And there is evidence that overpaid C.E.O.s are more likely to commit fraud that props up stock prices?perhaps because the more you have to gain from criminal activity, the more likely you are to engage in it. We need to stop following the maxim that A highly paid CEO is highly motivated to create results. It may be true, but the question is: Results for who the CEO or the company. Surowiecki clearly shows that high CEO compensations may be driving the wrong behavior. I have two more reasons why high CEO salaries are bad for a company: 1: Company employees can hardly avoid comparing their salary to the CEOs and ask Is he really worth that much more? It can lead to resentment towards top management. 2: It may make the salary the main reason the CEO works there. I believe companies get better results from a CEO who feels a true commitment to the company instead of one whos just there for the company jet and the stock options. Also, take a look at Alfie Kohns excellent book Punished by Rewards which shows that rewards (monetary or otherwise) dont generate long-term, beneficial behavior. At the very least companies should publish top management salaries and explain to shareholders why that money was well spent. Thanks for visiting my blog. If you're new here, you should check out this list of my 10 most popular articles. And if you want more great tips and ideas you should check out our newsletter about happiness at work. It's great and it's free :-)Share this:LinkedInFacebookTwitterRedditPinterest Related

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