Executive pay in the UK is "not fit
for purpose" and needs reform, according to a group that included some
of Britain's most high-profile bosses.
The Executive Remuneration
Working Group said there was "widespread scepticism and loss of public
confidence" over executive pay.
Sainsbury's chairman David Tyler and Legal & General chief executive Nigel Wilson worked on the interim report.
The report wants reform of long-term bonus schemes and more transparency.
Mr
Wilson, the working group's chairman, said: "The current approach to
executive pay in UK listed companies is not fit for purpose, and has
resulted in a poor of alignment of interests between executives,
shareholders and the company.
"Greater transparency, clearer
alignment of shareholder, company and executive interests, more
accountability on the part of Remuneration Committees and greater
engagement with and control by shareholders, working through company
boards, are vital to restore confidence in a system widely seen as
broken."
Despite the fact the FTSE all-share index of public
companies was trading at broadly the same levels as 1998, executive pay
over the same period has more than trebled, the report says. The
"widespread scepticism" among the public over whether executives deserve
their rewards was damaging for the big company sector, it said.
The report comes amid controversy over boardroom pay at several companies. Last week, 59% of BP shareholders voted against a £13.8m package for chief executive Bob Dudley, one of the largest revolts against boardroom pay in the UK.
Transparency
There
is also unrest among shareholders at other companies, including HSBC,
WPP and Reckitt Benckiser as they prepare to hold their annual meetings
in the coming weeks.
The working group's report, published in
conjunction with the Investment Association, was particularly concerned
about the widespread use of the three-year Long-Term Incentive Plans.
The LTIP terms can quickly become outdated if a company's performance
changes, producing what it calls "perverse consequences".
The
group wants remuneration committees, the bodies that set pay terms, to
be more accountable for the decisions they make. These committees "need
to ensure that remuneration outcomes are fully aligned with overall
business performance and strategy. Discretion should be used, both
upwards and downwards, rather than committees relying on formulaic
outcomes."
The report also wants greater transparency in how bonus
terms are reached, and calls on major institutional shareholders to be
more proactive in the pay debate.
A number of roundtables will be
set up to discuss the interim report, with representatives from
companies, the investment community, and other pay experts taking part. A
full report is expected to be ready by the summer, the Investment
Association said.
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