HomeNewsOpinionThe missing ‘s’ in CEO compen_ation

The missing ‘s’ in CEO compen_ation

CEO pay growth has outpaced revenue and profit growth in corporate India for several years. During the COVID-19 crisis, CEOs were expected to have some forbearance and put employees before themselves. But not all CEOs heard the clarion call

February 08, 2022 / 16:32 IST
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CEO(1) compensation has been a contentious issue in Corporate India for a few years now. A recent, yet-to-be-published IiAS study revealed that in 66 of the S&P BSE 100 companies, CEO pay had outpaced revenue or profit growth (or both) over a three-year period. The remuneration structure itself is of concern: in most of these companies, there is a higher component of fixed pay which is assured, with a limited share of performance-based pay, creating a weak incentive mechanism.

Universal hardships affect people differently — while some bear a higher burden, others give till it hurts, and some continue to self-preserve. Corporate India geared up to shield India from the COVID-19 onslaught, by quickly making protective gear, to supporting the healthcare system, and, of course, making vaccines. Even so, labour was hard hit. The exodus of labour, the layoffs, the furloughs, and pay cuts all impacted the average worker. While some industry leaders such as Mukesh Ambani or Uday Kotak(2) led in solidarity and took pay cuts in 2021, the feudal mindset of the proverbial ‘lala’ became far more pronounced as well.

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Of the S&P BSE 500, there were six executive directors whose remuneration in FY21 exceeded Rs 500 million (Table Below). These Indian companies do not have the size and complexity of their global peers to justify such remuneration levels. For context, the remuneration of the highest-paid board member of Toyota Motor Corporation (a company that has operations in about 200 countries and regions, and revenues in excess of $200 billion), aggregated JPY 1.45 billion for fiscal 2021, equivalent to about Rs 950 million.