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AMERICAN CHIEF EXECUTIVES ARE PAID TEN TIMES MORE THAN THEIR COUNTERPARTS
IN THE UK
Although the pay levels of chief executive officers (CEOs) in the
UK have grown in recent years, they remain far behind those enjoyed
by CEOs in the United States, especially if account is taken of
the gains the latter realise from exercising share options. That
is the central finding of new research by Professors Martin Conyon
and Kevin Murphy published in the latest issue of the Economic Journal.
They find that:
The CEOs of the UK's 500 largest companies earned £330 million
in total in 1997, an average of £660,000 each. That included
£74 million from exercising share options.
In contrast, the CEOs of the top 500 US firms made £3.2 billion
in 1997 (including £2 billion from share options), an average
of £6.3 million each.
Disney's Michael Eisner, dubbed the 'Prince of Pay' by pay critic
Graef Crystal, exercised options worth £348 million in December
1997, thus single-handedly out-earning the combined paycheques of
the top 500 CEOs in the UK that year.
British Sky Broadcasting's Sam Chisolm, the highest-paid UK executive
in 1997, was a mere pauper by American standards: his £6.8
million pay package would have only ranked as the 97th highest among
US chief executives that year.
These anecdotal comparisons, while driven by gains from share options
in the robust US stock market, hint at important differences in
CEO pay levels and practices in the UK and United States.
The study uses data from 510 UK companies and 1,666 US companies
in 1997. Of course, US pay levels may be higher because US companies
are larger, more successful or are in faster growing industries.
So the researchers control for firm size, industry, growth opportunities,
CEOs' individual skills and abilities and other observable characteristics,
so as to compare like with like.
The results of this process show that CEOs in the United States
earn on average 45% higher cash compensation and 190% higher total
compensation (including share options) than their UK counterparts.
The divergence between UK and US pay is especially pronounced in
large firms and financial firms.
Much of the wage premium enjoyed by the US CEOs stems from the
amount of share options they receive. The median stock holding for
US CEOs is 0.29%, while the median stock holding for UK CEOs is
only 0.05%. Conyon and Murphy argue that the differences in share
option awards, surprising given the similarity of the economies
and corporate governance structures, can be largely attributed to
institutional, political and cultural differences between the two
countries.
'The United States, as a society, has historically been more tolerant
of income inequality, especially if the inequality is driven by
differences in effort, talent or entrepreneurial risk taking', they
say.
The authors conclude: 'We believe that corporate tax deductibility
rules - which encourage option compensation in the United States
while discouraging option compensation in the UK - help explain
the observed differences in pay structures. Ultimately, however,
the differences largely reflect subtle political and cultural differences
in the two countries.'
'In the United States, the controversy over CEO pay has led to
tighter links between executive pay and performance (primarily through
an explosion in option grants), exacerbating wage inequality given
the robust US stock market. In the UK, the pay controversy has led
to statutory and non-statutory policies that discourage large share
option grants, lessening the pay performance and leading to a relatively
compressed wage structure.'
Note for Editors: 'The Prince and the Pauper? CEO Pay in the United
States and United Kingdom' by Martin Conyon and Kevin Murphy is
published in the November 2000 issue of the Economic Journal. Conyon
is Professor of Economics at the Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania
and Warwick University Business School; Murphy is Professor of Economics
at the University of Southern California. Financial support for
the research was provided by the Economic and Social Research Council
(ESRC).
For Further Information: contact Martin Conyon on 001-215-898-0744
(fax: 001-215-898-0401; email: Conyon@wharton.upenn.edu); RES Media
Consultant Romesh Vaitilingam on 0117-983-9770 or 07768-661095 (email:
romesh@compuserve.com); or RES Media Assistant Niall Flynn on 020-7878-2919
(email: nflynn@cepr.org).
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