Executive compensation is an art rather than a science. It
is not as if numbers are fed into a computer and the correct
compensation pops out. More discretion is involved than meets the eye.
“Since the financial crisis,” The New York Times reported in 2013, “compensation
for the directors of [America’s] biggest banks has continued to rise even as
the banks themselves, facing difficult markets and regulatory pressures, are
reining in bonuses and pay.” [1] Just five years after the financial crisis, it is interesting how the banks' respective managements decided to spend the TARP money from Congress and even more money from the Federal Reserve Bank. Also of note, board and upper management compensations seemed to be going in
different directions in spite of both being presumably tied to the same firm
performance. Even a
performance-incentive approach tied to firm-performance can accommodate a lot of latitude, such that banks differ in how much they pay their respective boards. The discretion permits inside collusion and even outlandish demands by "celebrity" members whose advice does not necessarily come up to celebrity status.
The full essay is at "Bank Boards Getting More for Doing Less."
1. Susanne Craig, “At Banks, Board Pay Soars Amid Cutbacks,” The New York Times, April 1, 2013.
The full essay is at "Bank Boards Getting More for Doing Less."
1. Susanne Craig, “At Banks, Board Pay Soars Amid Cutbacks,” The New York Times, April 1, 2013.