The Christian Science Monitor takes a broad look at the executive compensation issue:
How much?Some 77 percent of Americans polled last year felt that corporate
executives "earn too much." Most corporate boards apparently disagree.
Last year, although the nation's economy was already in trouble, they
gave the chief executive officers of the Standard & Poor's 500
largest companies on average a 2.6 percent pay hike to $10,544,470.
Why no action?On the presidential campaign trail, both Sens. Barack Obama and John
McCain attack the high levels of pay for corporate bosses, but are
mostly fuzzy on remedies. Several bills before Congress would attempt
to tame runaway executive pay. But none have passed both houses.
Politicians are "looking out" to protect the campaign contributions they receive from corporate executives, says Ms. Anderson.
And it's an election year.
Are they worth the money?
A new study by economists Ulrike Malmendier at the University of
California, Berkeley, and Geoffrey Tate at the UCLA Anderson School of
Management, Los Angeles, cast some doubt for some "CEO superstars."
After gaining fame and prestigious awards from business magazines and
others for their corporate performance, they are rewarded with even
more pay. But in the next three years their firms underperform by 15 to
20 percent compared with firms of non-prize-winning executives.
Ms. Malmendier suspects the CEOs are too busy writing books, sitting on other company boards, taking prestigious public service
jobs, and improving their golf handicaps.