Washington's Plans May Result in Even Higher Executive Pay
In 1992, Congress intervened in corporate compensation and
messed things up. Now it's the White House's turn.
Executive pay has emerged, once again, as a major issue in Washington. This
week Treasury and the Federal Reserve announced new regulations designed to
oversee and limit executive pay at thousands of financial institutions. This is
deeply ironic, because today's pay woes are the direct result of prior
government intervention.
Associated Press
Federal Reserve Board Chairman Ben Bernanke
In 1992, Congress decided it would use the tax code to "improve" (i.e.,
reduce) executive compensation in publicly traded companies. Its vehicle was the
Budget Reconciliation Act, a key provision of which became Section 162(m) of the
Internal Revenue Code.
Noting that executive compensation levels had received negative "scrutiny and
criticism" from the public, the new law targeted what it called "excessive
employee remuneration." It did so by limiting the ability of public companies to
deduct executive compensation for its top employees unless the compensation was
paid out in a form that Congress found acceptable. Salary was bad. Stock options
were tax favored.
Specifically, corporations were barred by law from deducting as a normal
business expense any salary payments of over $1 million. Stock options, however,
qualified for the corporate tax deduction without limitation. Much maligned
today, stock options then were said to be "performance based" and therefore
exempt from the new tax rules.
The new tax law immediately led to a tectonic shift in the way CEOs and other
top U.S. executives were paid. Stock and stock options became the dominant
feature of executive compensation packages.
The impetus for changing the executive compensation laws back then was
exactly the same as it is today. Politicians wanted pay lower and wanted to
change the executive compensation model to "fix" the risk-taking proclivities of
top managers.
In 1992, the government thought that managers were too risk averse. Stock
options were seen as the magic bullet for making managers act more aggressively
in the shareholders' interests. Today, many in Congress are blaming U.S.
executives for causing the financial crisis precisely by engaging in "excessive"
risk-taking. What they fail to mention is that it was Congress's own tinkering
with the tax code that led to the very compensation packages that incentivized
the risk-taking.
Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke asserted this week that "compensation practices at
some banking organizations have led to misaligned incentives and excessive
risk-taking, contributing to bank losses and financial instability." Mr.
Bernanke promised that the government "is working to ensure that compensation
packages appropriately tie rewards to longer-term performance and do not create
undue risk for the firm or the financial system."
Other government interference has made the executive compensation problem
even worse. A provision in the 1992 tax law required that executives meet
certain "objective" performance measures in order to qualify for incentive-based
(tax deductible) pay. In the scramble to come up with objective metrics on which
to base executive pay, cottage industry "executive compensation consultants"
emerged as the most important architects of executive compensation plans.
The compensation consultants promised to design pay programs that did things
like "drive the right behaviors" by corporate management, which meant assuming
more risk to maximize shareholder value. Public companies hired droves of
consultants to analyze pay schemes and design pay packages that created
incentives to maximize share prices. Consultants came to be viewed as essential
to boards of directors that wanted to implement appropriate—and tax
qualified—performance measures.
The most successful consultants are those who can justify the biggest salary
increases for the top executives of the companies that hired them. Researchers
at the University of Southern California recently found that the median CEO
compensation is $1.5 million in companies not using executive compensation
consultants, $3 million in companies that purchase general survey data from such
consultants but do not directly retain them, and $4.2 million in companies that
retain consultants.
Some companies use multiple consultants. The USC study found that the more
consultants a company hires, the more it pays its top executives. About
one-quarter of Fortune 250 companies hire multiple compensation consultants.
Activist investor Carl Icahn summed the situation up well when he recently
observed on his Web site that "the use of these compensation consultants, gives
both boards and CEOs the appearance of legitimacy for their decisions to award
massive pay packages to lackluster CEOs, making it appear that these decisions
are objective and scientific, which they absolutely are not."
The government also has tried to regulate executive compensation by requiring
greater disclosure of the details of compensation plans. Perversely, this too
has contributed to an increase in executive pay.
How so? No self-respecting board of directors is willing to admit that their
company's CEO is below average. So anytime the new disclosures indicate that an
executive's pay is below average in any way, a pay increase is ordered.
Since the early 1990s, government regulation of executive compensation has
encouraged greater share-price volatility and risk-taking by U.S. corporate
executives and led directly to higher, rather than lower, levels of executive
compensation. Nevertheless, the Obama administration is now seeking an even
greater role in overseeing and regulating executive pay.
In June, Gene Sperling, a top aid to Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner, told
the House Committee on Financial Services that "our goal is to help ensure that
there is a much closer alignment between compensation, sound risk management and
long-term value creation for firms and the economy as a whole."
This is just what the regulators told us back in 1992. Current proposals will
no doubt result in even higher percentages of executive compensation coming from
stock and option schemes rather than from salaries. History teaches that the
most profound consequences of new compensation regulation will be unintended. It
also teaches that as bad as private ordering may have worked in getting
executive compensation right, the results of central planning have been even
worse.
Mr. Macey is a law professor at Yale and a member of the Task Force
on Property Rights at Stanford University's Hoover Institution.
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