Friday, April 20, 2007

ASSOCIATED PRESS

The House voted yesterday to give shareholders at publicly owned companies a voice in executive-pay packages.

The shareholder vote under the bill would be advisory only. But Democratic backers of the provision said investors need a say when companies losing money or laying off workers are paying executives eight- and nine-figure salaries and retirement packages.



“This is not an aberration, and there is a hue and a cry from the American people across the American landscape that is saying something must be done,” said Rep. David Scott, Georgia Democrat.

The bill, which passed 269-134 and now goes to the Senate, was opposed by the White House and most Republicans. They argued that the Securities and Exchange Commission recently has taken steps to make corporate-pay packages more transparent and that Congress should stay out of corporate affairs.

President Bush earlier this year questioned the extravagant pay of some company managers and directors, but said it was not a matter for government involvement.

“There is no justification for many of these pay packages,” said Rep. Spencer Bachus of Alabama, the top Republican on the House Financial Services Committee. But “this is Congress beginning to intrude on corporations.”

The bill, sponsored by committee Chairman Barney Frank, Massachusetts Democrat, establishes an annual nonbinding vote on executive-pay packages and calls for an advisory vote if a company awards a new golden parachute package while simultaneously negotiating the purchase or sale of the company.

Mr. Frank noted that the SEC had recently required companies to include a chart of compensation for top officials but had said it did not have the power to compel a vote on executive pay. He said the bill requires corporations “simply to add to that a box that says ‘I approve/I disapprove.’ ”

Investor advocates, union pension funds and shareholder groups have supported the legislation, but GOP opponents expressed concerns it would give such groups an inroad to change a company’s policies.

“It greatly worries me that this bill could set a precedent of giving activist institutional investors, who may have their own political and social agendas unrelated to the financial wealth of the companies, more influence,” said Rep. Michael N. Castle, Delaware Republican.

Republicans unsuccessfully offered amendments requiring pension funds and other shareholder groups to reveal their spending or their votes on compensation issues. Also defeated was a proposal by Rep. Scott Garrett, New Jersey Republican, that would have eliminated the shareholder vote when compensation packages do not exceed averages at comparable companies by more than 10 percent.

Democrats, while stressing that the bill makes no judgment on what is excessive pay, cited studies that the average CEO of a Standard & Poor’s 500 company receives $14.78 million in compensation.

Rep. Brad Miller, North Carolina Democrat, said that 15 years ago the average CEO made 140 times what a worker at his company earned but that now the difference is 500 times. He said the aggregate compensation of the top five executives is now 10.3 percent of the corporate profits of public corporations.

Shareholder votes on pay have been adopted in Britain, Australia and Sweden. Advocates say that, while pay packages are rarely rejected, the votes help to keep executive compensation in check.

Sen. Barack Obama, Illinois Democrat and presidential contender, has introduced a similar bill in the Senate.

Copyright © 2024 The Washington Times, LLC. Click here for reprint permission.

Please read our comment policy before commenting.

Click to Read More and View Comments

Click to Hide