Saturday, October 12, 2019

Why Do CEOs Make So Much Money?

By Doug McCullough

Certain politicians and social critics would have us scandalized that the annual income of CEOs of large corporations is often several times that of the employees who work in those companies. Is it unfair that executives make substantially more than a middle manager, an executive assistant, or an assembly-line worker? How are those salaries determined? Is significant income disparity unjust? To consider these questions, let’s take a look at the unique role and responsibilities of a chief executive officer.


What CEOs Do

The chief executive officer (CEO) is the highest-ranking officer in a corporation. He or she is selected by and reports to the board of directors (who, in turn, are appointed by the corporation’s shareholders).

Ultimately, the CEO is responsible for creating value for the owners of the corporation: the shareholders.

The CEO executes the strategic business plan approved by the board and helps shape that corporate vision.

She forms a company’s corporate culture by creating goodwill and “buy-in” from the various constituents or “stakeholders” (such as employees, customers, and vendors) of the company’s mission. But ultimately, the CEO is responsible for creating value for the owners of the corporation: the shareholders.

In light of these unique responsibilities, let’s examine some possible factors for executive pay.

Do CEOs Get Paid More Because They Work Harder?

The daily work of an executive is difficult. It requires personal sacrifice, long hours, and the ability to deal with stress and adversity. But CEOs are not paid amply because their work is hard or unenjoyable. Cleaning latrines in 100-degree heat would be more strenuous and less pleasant but would not fetch a CEO salary. So even though executives work hard, the degree of strain, alone, does not explain high CEO pay.

Supply and Demand for Talent

You probably recall from Economics 101 that prices are determined by the interplay of supply and demand. Labor pricing, or compensation, is no exception.

Large corporations compete for experienced, proven, high-performing CEOs to run their companies. The directors of a corporation make the subjective determination of recruiting executives and setting their compensation. But that compensation package is often highly negotiated.

At any given moment, there’s a much smaller pool of experienced executives to draw from.

We see a similar dynamic in the sports world. High performers and athletes with a reputation for prior success garner much higher salaries than unproven prospects. Professionals with executive experience and a successful track record are far more scarce than the labor pool for middle managers or entry-level marketers.

To state the obvious, at any given moment there are only 500 CEOs of Fortune 500 companies. But any one of those Fortune 500 companies may have hundreds or thousands of employees throughout the organization. Those companies may have jobs ranging from entry-level positions to mid-level management, as well as highly technical jobs such as engineering or developing artificial intelligence. The relative value of each one of these positions is partially a function of the supply of available workers for each position, as well as the value of the output for a particular job (more on value-creation below). At any given moment, there’s a much smaller pool of experienced executives to draw from.

Experience and Training

Another factor that may explain why executive compensation is higher than entry-level compensation is the differential in experience and training. Lower-level employees often enter into a job with limited skills and learn as they go. They advance and achieve higher income as they gain experience and develop new skills. Often, executives have college degrees from respected universities, as well as Masters of Business Administration (MBAs). In addition, executives typically have worked within an industry for decades gaining real-world experience and specialized training.

While experience and training are important, two people with similar degrees and years of industry experience may not be paid the same (and quite justifiably so). Credentials and tenure, while a factor, don’t fully explain disparities in earnings.

Competition

Beyond degrees and tenure, how an individual performs along each stage of their career may indicate their earnings’ trajectory.

No single man or woman creates all the value in a company, but the CEO uniquely bears responsibility for the success and failure of the entire enterprise.

Executives who climbed the ranks likely spent years competing with co-workers and even peers at different companies to advance at each stage of their career. On one hand, this is a weeding out process. Other workers may choose less challenging career paths. On the other hand, competition is a test of a professional’s reliability, perseverance, and sustainable performance. Through years of experience and consistent high performance, an emerging executive can demonstrate on the job that they are capable of the very demanding roles and responsibilities of an executive.

Value

The compensation of executives is set by the board of directors. Arguably, the best way to do this is to tie the CEO’s compensation to the value he or she creates.

In the case of a CEO, they are responsible for executing the strategic vision for the entire company. No single man or woman creates all the value in a company, but the CEO uniquely bears responsibility for the success and failure of the entire enterprise. As a result, executives are often paid a healthy base salary, but a considerable share of their earnings come in the form of equity compensation.

Equity compensation is employee pay in the form of shares of a company’s stock (or options to purchase stock). Equity compensation aligns the interests of the employee with the corporation and its shareholders because the employee is incentivized to grow the value of the company. When executives perform well for the owners of a company, it makes sense that they are compensated for their performance.
Beyond the CEO, a corporation may offer equity compensation to other high performers as an incentive for them to stay with a company, develop new products and technologies, and help the business grow.

In the case of a publicly traded corporation, the per-share value of the company’s stock (as well as the aggregate value of the company) is easily determined on a public stock exchange. When the corporation succeeds, a CEO with company or stock options will benefit in the form of stock value appreciation.

Compensation for Performance

A CEO’s pay is a function of the executive’s relationship to the company and its shareholders. Shareholders provide capital to the corporation with the hope of a return on their investment. The CEO helps generate investment returns by growing the value of the company and its shares. Thoughtfully structured executive compensation is based on a combination of expected value creation along with measurable performance and shareholder value growth. When executives perform well for the owners of a company, it makes sense that they are compensated for their performance.

The above originally appeared at fee.org.



3 comments:

  1. CEOs have a lot of responsibility, but having met CEOs from large multi national companies, I'm not impressed with their abilities. Really just politicians at that point. A lot of highly compensated executives of poorly performing companies. I'm all for a free market in labor, and people have to take care of their own careers, but I wish in stories like this there were more specific examples of where high CEO pay is merited rather than general supply and demand. It would connect with people better.

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  2. It's not about performance, it's about who you know and who people with big money trust to play the game of clandestine reciprocity.

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  3. Why are they paid so much now? Cronyism and Central banking. It's a club and you aren't in it. But on the positive side there's a better understanding of the value of the CEO's talent.

    There are many positions in a corporation from engineers to production managers and so on that can and often do make a huge positive impact to the bottom line and none of these are compensated based on that. They are compensated based on what the corporation can pay a replacement even if that replacement wouldn't do as well. To the corporation these people are fungible. This is why a corporation will layoff all its experienced engineers to save money on salary costs replacing them with people fresh out of college or H1Bs with little experience. The value isn't understood. The bigger the company the worse it is.

    Essentially there is no HR for CEOs in these corporations that compensate CEOs so highly. There's no HR looking to find who will do at least the minimum for the minimum. The CEO doesn't have to compete on price the way other talent does. That talent is better understood than that of someone who comes up with a new product or a new way to build that product for less money at a higher quality. It's another application of Bastiat's seen and the unseen. The CEO's performance and talent is very much seen while other's is not.



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