scholarly journals Executive Pay and Labor’s Shares: Unions and Corporate Governance from Enron to Dodd-Frank

2020 ◽  
Vol 0 (0) ◽  
Author(s):  
Sanford M. Jacoby

AbstractThis article is an historical analysis of the U.S. labor movement’s shareholder activism during the 2000s, which was based on their pension-plan assets. During the previous decade, corporate governance had tilted to give shareholders greater voice in corporate decisions. The protagonists were public pension plans such as CalPERS. Come the 2000s, they were replaced by unions and union-influenced pension plans. Their agendas overlapped but union investors were distinctive in their use of shareholder activism to make companies more public-minded, raise labor’s organizing power, and challenge executive power by reliance not only on shareholder activism but also political activities. Labor’s signature issue was executive pay, which was a topic that that shareholder activists during the 1990s had avoided other than to push for stock-based pay. But three waves of corporate scandals during the following decade caused other shareholders to become skeptical of executive pay-setting methods. Union investors zeroed in on expensing and backdating of stock options, and fought for say on pay, the issue where they had the greatest impact. An interaction between private orderings and regulation now developed, whereby shareholder pay reforms found their way into law. With inequality a major social concern, unions repeatedly contrasted lofty executive pay to stagnant wages. Yet little was said about lofty payouts to shareholders, which may have been a more important driver of inequality than executive pay. The article ties corporate governance to larger social and political developments in the U.S., and to the labor movement, embedding corporate governance in historical context.

2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (04) ◽  
pp. 500-514 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria D. Fitzpatrick

AbstractFor many people, working after beginning retirement benefit collection is a way to enhance financial security by increasing income. Existing research has shown that retirees are sensitive to the Social Security earnings test, which restricts the amount of earnings some beneficiaries can receive. However, little is known about the effects of other types of policies on post-retirement employment. Instead of restricting earnings, many public pension plans restrict the number of hours beneficiaries can work. I use return-to-work rules limiting the number of hours of employment in a state's public pension plan and administrative data on employment and retirement to determine the rules’ effects on retirement decisions and post-retirement labor supply. I find that the increases in the maximum number of hours of post-retirement employment lead to no change in retirement benefit collection and to increases in part-time work among retirees. As such, these policies appear to be binding on the labor supply decisions of some employees. These results are relevant for designing policies aimed at extending work-lives or improving the health of pension systems.


2009 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 523-530
Author(s):  
Sharad Asthana

Insuring post-retirement benefits to retirees is a joint responsibility of the employees, employers, and the US government. Managers have been shown to manipulate pension plan reports with the intention of maximizing their own gains to the detriment of current and future retirees. External monitoring by regulators and auditors is effective in curbing this opportunistic behavior. This paper extends these findings to examine if effective internal monitoring in the form of strong corporate governance is instrumental in controlling manipulations of pension reports by managers. Empirical tests support the finding that effective corporate governance is inversely associated with the extent of managerial manipulations in pension plan reporting. This result should be of interest to employees, retirees, and the US Government that are trying to insure the future income of senior citizens.


2014 ◽  
Vol 30 (2) ◽  
pp. 557
Author(s):  
Youngkyun Park

This paper investigates whether public pension plans risk-taking behavior has changed after the recent financial crisis of 2008 by testing two contrasting hypotheses on pension funding: risk transfer and risk management hypotheses. In managing pension assets, public pension plan sponsors may have an incentive for risk transfer because underfunded pension obligations can be shifted to future taxpayers (risk transfer hypothesis). Facing a budget constraint, they may also have an incentive for risk management because they would prefer to stabilize their contributions (risk management hypothesis). Using a sample of 126 public pension plans for the period of 2001?2011, this paper finds that public pension plans risk-taking behavior has changed after the financial crisis of 2008. Before the financial crisis, public pension plan sponsors invest more in equities when a large required contribution is expected, which is consistent with the risk transfer hypothesis. After the financial crisis, however, the plan sponsors invest less in equities when a large required contribution is expected, which is consistent with the risk management hypothesis. The findings suggest that public pension plans risk-taking behavior is not constant over time, but can be varied depending on market conditions.


2003 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 94-105 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kuntara Pukthuanthong ◽  
Eli Talmor ◽  
James S. Wallace

This study performs an in-depth look at the corporate governance, voting and ownership structure of the companies selected using a relatively homogenous data of the U.S. financial sector. Variables that proxy for managerial strategic discretion and task complexity are found to best explain CEO compensation. Corporate governance, including board characteristics and ownership structure, is the second leading determinant of pay variation, while firm performance and CEO specific characteristics seem to play the least role. In accord with studies on managerial stock ownership and Tobin’s Q, the pay-for-performance relation appears to be curvilinear in CEO stock ownership


2010 ◽  
Vol 7 (3) ◽  
pp. 193-209 ◽  
Author(s):  
Seow-Eng Ong ◽  
Milena Tacheva Petrova ◽  
Andrew Spieler

We study proposals to repeal a potentially non-incentive compatible feature of outside director compensation contracts - director retirement plans. The reason for concern is that the required vesting period to receive benefits may instill complacency in director oversight. In the past, such pension plans were a common feature of compensation contracts until the mid-1990’s when shareholder attention shifted away from governance and toward compensation issues. Many firms removed/amended their plans voluntarily or from shareholder pressure. In a sample of 70 firms targeted by shareholders, we find no appreciable benefit to activist efforts to remove director retirement plans. This result holds regardless of the sponsor type (individual, institution or coordinated activism). However, relative to a control group, sample firms display lower levels of outside director oversight. There is also evidence that higher institutional ownership and poor prior performance increases the likelihood of a firm amending/removing its director pension plan. In addition, target firms significantly underperform standard market benchmark and mirror returns of control sample prior to event period. These results generally persist in the post-event period. Collectively, these results are consistent with the majority of the activism literature in that no discernible improvement in performance is detected. Our results have important implications to policymakers about the role of shareholder activism.


2019 ◽  
Vol 45 (6) ◽  
pp. 781-792
Author(s):  
Fang Sun ◽  
Xiangjing Wei

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to examine how investor sentiment, proxied by Michigan consumer confidence index, affects the choice of defined benefit pension plan discount rates. Design/methodology/approach The authors use multivariate analysis to test our hypotheses. The dependent variable is defined pension plan discount rate and the testing variables are investor sentiment and a dummy variable representing underfunded status. Findings The authors find a negative and significant relation between investor sentiment and pension plan discount rate. During high (low) sentiment periods, pension discount rate tends to be adjusted downward (upward) discretionarily. Further analysis indicates the relationship between pension discount rate and investor sentiment is more pronounced for firms with underfunded pension plans. The results can be explained by limited attention effects, capital budgeting strategy and earning smoothing. Practical implications The empirical results of this study have important implications for corporate governance and regulation. Specifically, the results suggest the need for increased attention from boards of directors, auditors and regulators to reported pension liabilities, especially during periods of high investor sentiment when pension plan sponsors are more likely to adjust down pension discount rate and accordingly to increase pension liabilities. Originality/value The paper contributes to the extant literature by identifying investor sentiment as a new incentive of pension discount rate manipulation. The empirical results of this study also have important implications for corporate governance and regulation.


2010 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
pp. 617-646 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amy B. Monahan

There is significant interest in reforming retirement plans for public school employees, particularly in light of current market conditions. This article presents an overview of the various types of state regulation of public pension plans that affect possibilities for reform. Nearly all of the various approaches to public pension plan protection taken by the states have significant flaws. These flaws include a lack of clarity regarding what plan changes the relevant legal standard will allow, combined with either too much or too little protection for plan participants. This article argues that states would be well served to adopt a contractual approach to public pension benefits but to limit that contractual protection to accrued benefits. This approach is clear, protects legitimate participant interests, and preserves an employer's ability to respond to changing economic conditions.


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