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Explaining Executive Pay [electronic resource] : The roles of managerial power and complexity / by Lukas Hengartner.

By: Contributor(s): Publisher: Wiesbaden : DUV, 2006Description: XXIII, 207 p. online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9783835093911
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification:
  • 658.3 23
LOC classification:
  • HF5549-5549.5
Online resources:
Contents:
The compensation setting process -- Research review on executive pay -- Research review on director pay -- Are executives paid for the complexity of the job they have? -- Can powerful managers extract rents? -- Research methods -- Research results -- Discussion -- Conclusions.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: The pay of corporate leaders has escalated in the last few decades. At the same time the number of research papers on this issue has soared. Despite an impressive research volume, however, many questions concerning executive compensation remain unsolved. Lukas Hengartner develops broad concepts for managerial power and firm complexity and empirically tests the influence of these concepts on executive compensation for a large sample of Swiss stock-listed companies. As the jobs of some managers are more complex and demanding than others, these CEOs may command a pay premium in the managerial labor market. It has also been argued that top managers have the power to influence their own compensation. The author shows that both firm complexity and managerial power are associated with higher pay levels. This suggests that top managers are paid for the complexity of their job and that more powerful top managers receive pay in excess of the level that would be optimal for shareholders.
Item type: eBooks
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The compensation setting process -- Research review on executive pay -- Research review on director pay -- Are executives paid for the complexity of the job they have? -- Can powerful managers extract rents? -- Research methods -- Research results -- Discussion -- Conclusions.

The pay of corporate leaders has escalated in the last few decades. At the same time the number of research papers on this issue has soared. Despite an impressive research volume, however, many questions concerning executive compensation remain unsolved. Lukas Hengartner develops broad concepts for managerial power and firm complexity and empirically tests the influence of these concepts on executive compensation for a large sample of Swiss stock-listed companies. As the jobs of some managers are more complex and demanding than others, these CEOs may command a pay premium in the managerial labor market. It has also been argued that top managers have the power to influence their own compensation. The author shows that both firm complexity and managerial power are associated with higher pay levels. This suggests that top managers are paid for the complexity of their job and that more powerful top managers receive pay in excess of the level that would be optimal for shareholders.

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