Lucrative pay to corporate managers remains controversial yet continues to evade judicial scrutiny for legitimacy. Although many arrangements likely would pass the most rigorous scrutiny, it seems equally clear that some would not. Some agreements are not the product of arm’s-length bargaining, can rivet managers on short-term stock prices at the destruction of long-term business value, and can misalign manager-shareholder interests. Yet even such objectionable arrangements are immune from serious legal oversight. In theory, they are open to judicial review under corporate law, but shareholders challenging pay contracts face formidable procedural hurdles in derivative litigation and substantive obstacles from corporation law’s business judg...
Since the 1980s, executive compensation of directors and officers in U.S. Corporations have increase...
The article discusses the issue of diminished pay in executive compensation. It put forwards an anal...
The debate over the lack of correlation between CEO compensation and performance has caused a divide...
Lucrative pay to corporate managers remains controversial yet continues to evade judicial scrutiny f...
Lawrence Cunningham has written an insightful and persuasive article calling on courts to apply the ...
This Article proposes a new approach to monitoring executive compensation. While the public seems co...
This Article focuses on the last of shareholders’ alternatives: suing. Shareholder derivative litiga...
Employing a model of game theory, this Article shows how current judge-made law in areas of the duty...
One of the great dilemmas of corporate law is how to address the problem of excessive executive comp...
In the midst of the global recession of the late 2000s, there was an outcry against corporate execut...
History repeats itself in the law as in other arenas. In the law of executive compensation, such a r...
Conventional wisdom among corporate law theorists holds that the presence of a controlling sharehold...
In this paper, we examine the key legal characteristics of 375 employment contracts between some of ...
This chapter from Research Handbook on the Economics of Corporate Law (Claire Hill & Brett McDonnell...
In Pay Without Performance, Professors Lucian Bebchuk and Jesse Fried develop and summarize the lead...
Since the 1980s, executive compensation of directors and officers in U.S. Corporations have increase...
The article discusses the issue of diminished pay in executive compensation. It put forwards an anal...
The debate over the lack of correlation between CEO compensation and performance has caused a divide...
Lucrative pay to corporate managers remains controversial yet continues to evade judicial scrutiny f...
Lawrence Cunningham has written an insightful and persuasive article calling on courts to apply the ...
This Article proposes a new approach to monitoring executive compensation. While the public seems co...
This Article focuses on the last of shareholders’ alternatives: suing. Shareholder derivative litiga...
Employing a model of game theory, this Article shows how current judge-made law in areas of the duty...
One of the great dilemmas of corporate law is how to address the problem of excessive executive comp...
In the midst of the global recession of the late 2000s, there was an outcry against corporate execut...
History repeats itself in the law as in other arenas. In the law of executive compensation, such a r...
Conventional wisdom among corporate law theorists holds that the presence of a controlling sharehold...
In this paper, we examine the key legal characteristics of 375 employment contracts between some of ...
This chapter from Research Handbook on the Economics of Corporate Law (Claire Hill & Brett McDonnell...
In Pay Without Performance, Professors Lucian Bebchuk and Jesse Fried develop and summarize the lead...
Since the 1980s, executive compensation of directors and officers in U.S. Corporations have increase...
The article discusses the issue of diminished pay in executive compensation. It put forwards an anal...
The debate over the lack of correlation between CEO compensation and performance has caused a divide...