Saturday, February 10, 2007

EXECUTIVE PAY BECOMING A SERIOUS ISSUE

How does a $210 million severance package sound? $200 million? Well, Robert Nardelli did a poor job of running Home Depot and got pushed out of the executive suite recently, but was handed the $210 million king's ransom on his way out the door. Henry A. McKinnell did perhaps an even worse job of running Pfizer. His reward? A cool $200 million.

Things have gotten so bad on the executive pay front that even President Bush has recently weighed in on the issue. In a speech on Wall Street in January he said that corporate board members "need to pay attention to the executive compensation packages that you approve."

From the AP:
Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, is expected to introduce legislation on the issue. Frank said in a January speech at the National Press Club that high CEO pay is "not just a matter of envy. It has reached a point where it has some macroeconomic significance."

Frank pointed to research done by Harvard professor Lucian Bebchuk showing that compensation of the top five officers at the country's public companies between 1993 and 2002 totaled about $250 billion — nearly 10 percent of aggregate profits. CEO pay grew by a median 11.29 percent in 2005, according to The Corporate Library, which tracks governance, compensation and performance.

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