Asian businesses in the 21st century will learn from the experience of their US counterparts in promoting better governance of executive compensation in publicly traded companies. In this paper we examine the membership of the compensation peer groups for 121 of the largest US-headquartered, publicly-traded firms. We find that the existence of self-reinforcing recursive relationships through peer groups is pervasive. We illustrate that the effects from these relationships could be very large. Finally, we measure the association between the size of a firm’s recursive effect and that firm’s average compensation for named executives. The association is large, positive, and statistically significant. Thus our findings suggest that recursive rel...
This study examines determinants of excessive executive compensation in PRC firms using 8,100 firm-y...
Using a sample of 344 non-financial companies from FTSE All-Share Index over financial year 2002 to ...
This paper provides the first systematic evidence on the nature of the relation between executive co...
Asian businesses in the 21st century will learn from the experience of their US counterparts in prom...
Publicly traded firms in the U.S. typically determine C.E.O. compensation by benchmarking the pay of...
We study the influence of the corporate board network on executive pay for 3,395 US firms between 19...
Executive compensation has risen considerably since the 1980s and continues to attract attention fro...
When companies select and use compensation peers to determine chief executive officer (CEO) compensa...
This paper considers the features of the newly disclosed compensation peer groups and demonstrates t...
Agency theory has for some time been the dominant on executive compensation research. Behavioural ap...
Top executive compensation can be affected significantly by peer group pay. This paper investigates ...
We study the influence of the corporate board network on executive pay for 3,395 US firms over the p...
AbstractThis paper examines executive compensation in the subsidiaries of business groups in China. ...
Companies can potentially use compensation peer groups to inflate pay by choosing peers that are lar...
We study the selection of peers into compensation peer groups reported by U.S. corpo-rations. Securi...
This study examines determinants of excessive executive compensation in PRC firms using 8,100 firm-y...
Using a sample of 344 non-financial companies from FTSE All-Share Index over financial year 2002 to ...
This paper provides the first systematic evidence on the nature of the relation between executive co...
Asian businesses in the 21st century will learn from the experience of their US counterparts in prom...
Publicly traded firms in the U.S. typically determine C.E.O. compensation by benchmarking the pay of...
We study the influence of the corporate board network on executive pay for 3,395 US firms between 19...
Executive compensation has risen considerably since the 1980s and continues to attract attention fro...
When companies select and use compensation peers to determine chief executive officer (CEO) compensa...
This paper considers the features of the newly disclosed compensation peer groups and demonstrates t...
Agency theory has for some time been the dominant on executive compensation research. Behavioural ap...
Top executive compensation can be affected significantly by peer group pay. This paper investigates ...
We study the influence of the corporate board network on executive pay for 3,395 US firms over the p...
AbstractThis paper examines executive compensation in the subsidiaries of business groups in China. ...
Companies can potentially use compensation peer groups to inflate pay by choosing peers that are lar...
We study the selection of peers into compensation peer groups reported by U.S. corpo-rations. Securi...
This study examines determinants of excessive executive compensation in PRC firms using 8,100 firm-y...
Using a sample of 344 non-financial companies from FTSE All-Share Index over financial year 2002 to ...
This paper provides the first systematic evidence on the nature of the relation between executive co...