June 10, 2009 4:16 PM
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Obama Administration's New Executive Compensation Plan: "Say on Pay" Gives SEC New Power
(MoneyWatch) Executive compensation is taking center stage again. While the Obama administration has ditched its original plan to cap salaries for TARP recipients, it still wants to change the way corporate America pays its employees. The four major themes that Treasury Secretary Geithner outlined are:
In return for total lack of executive management and board competence, the government is hitting below the belt by empowering the SEC to enter the compensation debate. Yup, that same SEC that itself has been called incompetent at various times during the financial crisis.
It's like watching two miserable people getting together: corporate America and the SEC deserve each other.
The administration will work with Congress to pass "say on pay" legislation that would give the SEC authority to require companies to give shareholders a non-binding vote on executive compensation packages. The SEC will also try to ensure that compensation committees are more independent. But don't worry--Geithner underscored that government is not capping pay: "We are not setting forth precise prescriptions for how companies should set compensation, which can often be counterproductive."
That said, "special master" Kenneth Feinberg will have discretion to approve of compensation for 175 top executives at seven of the nation's largest companies, which have received government money during the financial crisis.
It's obvious that "special master" feels a little bit kinky, so everyone has been referring to Feingberg's position as "Pay Czar". Must we always turn to Russian monarchs for these names? We like the British better than the Russians, so I propose the "Prince of Pay" going forward. OK, maybe not.
Image by Flickr user antwerpenR, cc 2.0
- compensation plans should properly measure and reward performance
- compensation should be structured to account for the time horizon of risks
- compensation practices should be aligned with sound risk management
- we should reexamine whether golden parachutes and supplemental retirement packages align the interests of executives and shareholders.
In return for total lack of executive management and board competence, the government is hitting below the belt by empowering the SEC to enter the compensation debate. Yup, that same SEC that itself has been called incompetent at various times during the financial crisis.
It's like watching two miserable people getting together: corporate America and the SEC deserve each other.
The administration will work with Congress to pass "say on pay" legislation that would give the SEC authority to require companies to give shareholders a non-binding vote on executive compensation packages. The SEC will also try to ensure that compensation committees are more independent. But don't worry--Geithner underscored that government is not capping pay: "We are not setting forth precise prescriptions for how companies should set compensation, which can often be counterproductive."
That said, "special master" Kenneth Feinberg will have discretion to approve of compensation for 175 top executives at seven of the nation's largest companies, which have received government money during the financial crisis.
It's obvious that "special master" feels a little bit kinky, so everyone has been referring to Feingberg's position as "Pay Czar". Must we always turn to Russian monarchs for these names? We like the British better than the Russians, so I propose the "Prince of Pay" going forward. OK, maybe not.
Image by Flickr user antwerpenR, cc 2.0
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Jill Schlesinger Jill Schlesinger, CFP®, is the Editor-at-Large for CBS MoneyWatch. She covers the economy, markets, investing or anything else with a dollar sign. Prior to the launch of MoneyWatch in 2009, Jill was the chief investment officer for an independent investment advisory firm. In her infancy, she was an options trader on the Commodities Exchange of New York.
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