By Jean Eaglesham and Francesco
Guerrera in New York
Published: August 30 2010 22:01
| Last updated: August 30 2010 22:01
US companies face a “logistical nightmare”
from a new rule forcing them to disclose the ratio between their
chief executive’s pay package and that of the typical employee, lawyers
have warned.
The mandatory disclosure will provide
ammunition for activists seeking to target perceived examples of
excessive pay and perks. The law taps into public anger at the
increasing disparity between the faltering incomes of middle America and the
largely recession-proof multimillion-dollar remuneration of the typical
corporate chief.
S&P 500 chief executives last year received
median pay packages of $7.5m, according to executive compensation research
firm Equilar. By comparison, official statistics show the average private
sector employee was paid just over $40,000.
Business sees the disclosure provision –
buried in section 953(b) of the
Dodd-Frank financial reform act – as a bureaucratic headache that may
encourage false comparisons.
“We’re not debating the concept of disclosure
– we think it’s a good thing,” said Larry Burton, executive director of the
Business Roundtable, which represents chief executives of the biggest US
companies. “But you can do more harm than good if you take a well-intended
piece of policy and implement it badly. That’s the risk here.”
The rules’ complexity means multinationals
face a “logistical nightmare” in calculating the ratio, which has to be
based on the median annual total compensation for all employees, warned
Richard Susko, partner at law firm Cleary Gottlieb. “It’s just not do-able
for a large company with tens of thousands of employees worldwide.”
Pay experts said business had been caught
off-guard by the measure, which was not one of the high-profile
battlegrounds of the Dodd-Frank legislation. Companies are now gearing up to
lobby the
Securities and Exchange Commission, which has to write detailed
provisions for the new rule.
The rule could also reward with a relatively
low ratio those companies that outsourced low-paid work rather than keeping
jobs in-house, lawyers said.
Robert Menendez, the senator who sponsored
the provision, dismissed business fears. “The idea behind the new rule is
that sunlight is the best disinfectant,” said an aide. “Disclosure will help
encourage fair pay for workers at a time when middle class pay has stagnated
while CEO pay has skyrocketed.”
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