Shareholders have long complained that top executives are overpaid by corporate directors irrespective of their performance. Largely powerless to stop these practices, in 2002, they prevailed upon the U.K. Parliament to adopt legislation requiring public companies to permit their shareholders to have a mandatory, non-binding vote on the compensation of their top executives (“Say on Pay”). Since that time, there has been a wave of such legislation enacted in countries around the world, including the U.S., Australia, Belgium, the Netherlands, and Sweden, while Switzerland, Germany and France appear to be moving rapidly in the same direction. In this article, we ask what is the justification for adopting these rules? For countries where most c...
The Dodd-Frank Act of 2010 mandated a number of regulatory reforms including a requirement that larg...
This monograph explores the relation between corporate governance and executive compensation and eva...
Executive pay practices are currently a "cause celebre" of corporate governance in the media, among ...
Shareholders have long complained that top executives are overpaid by corporate directors irrespecti...
Shareholders have long complained that top executives are overpaid by corporate directors irrespecti...
For the last two decades there has been quite a bit of debate about whether executives receive exces...
The level of shareholder participation in the determination of executive compensation has emerged, i...
This article considers the regulation of executive pay practices in listed companies in the European...
Due to the European Commission’s view that the financial crisis was largely caused by the passivity ...
Shareholder and public dissatisfaction with executive compensation has led to calls for an annual sh...
This study investigates the efficacy of say-on-pay (SOP) regulation in mitigating excessive CEO comp...
We examine whether legal institutions affect the balance of power between CEOs and shareholders. Par...
The recent financial crisis has created a public uproar over top-executive pay packages and has led ...
The Netherlands adopted shareholders’ say on pay over a decade ago. The general meeting of sharehold...
This Article proposes the adoption of employee say-on-pay in corporate governance. The board would b...
The Dodd-Frank Act of 2010 mandated a number of regulatory reforms including a requirement that larg...
This monograph explores the relation between corporate governance and executive compensation and eva...
Executive pay practices are currently a "cause celebre" of corporate governance in the media, among ...
Shareholders have long complained that top executives are overpaid by corporate directors irrespecti...
Shareholders have long complained that top executives are overpaid by corporate directors irrespecti...
For the last two decades there has been quite a bit of debate about whether executives receive exces...
The level of shareholder participation in the determination of executive compensation has emerged, i...
This article considers the regulation of executive pay practices in listed companies in the European...
Due to the European Commission’s view that the financial crisis was largely caused by the passivity ...
Shareholder and public dissatisfaction with executive compensation has led to calls for an annual sh...
This study investigates the efficacy of say-on-pay (SOP) regulation in mitigating excessive CEO comp...
We examine whether legal institutions affect the balance of power between CEOs and shareholders. Par...
The recent financial crisis has created a public uproar over top-executive pay packages and has led ...
The Netherlands adopted shareholders’ say on pay over a decade ago. The general meeting of sharehold...
This Article proposes the adoption of employee say-on-pay in corporate governance. The board would b...
The Dodd-Frank Act of 2010 mandated a number of regulatory reforms including a requirement that larg...
This monograph explores the relation between corporate governance and executive compensation and eva...
Executive pay practices are currently a "cause celebre" of corporate governance in the media, among ...