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  5. Are U.S. CEOs Paid More than U.K. CEOs? Inferences from Risk- Adjusted Pay (CRI 2009-003)

Are U.S. CEOs Paid More than U.K. CEOs? Inferences from Risk- Adjusted Pay (CRI 2009-003)

File(s)
cri_2009_003.pdf (157.41 KB)
Permanent Link(s)
https://hdl.handle.net/1813/73190
Collections
Institute for Compensation Studies
Author
Conyon, Martin J.
Core, John E.
Guay, Wayne R.
Abstract

We compute and compare risk-adjusted pay for US and UK CEOs, where the adjustment is based on estimated risk premiums stemming from the equity incentives borne by CEOs. Controlling for firm and industry characteristics, we find that US CEOs have higher pay, but also bear much higher stock and option incentives than UK CEOs. Using reasonable estimates of risk premiums, we find that risk-adjusted US CEO pay does not appear large compared to that of UK CEOs. We also examine differences in pay and equity incentives between a sample of non-UK European CEOs and a matched sample of US CEOs, and find that risk-adjusting pay may explain about half of the apparent higher pay for US CEOs.

Date Issued
2009-04-06
Keywords
CEO compensation
•
incentives
•
risk aversion
•
corporate governance
•
international comparisons
Type
preprint

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