Executive Compensation: Six Questions that Need Answering

37 Pages Posted: 24 Jul 1999 Last revised: 2 Mar 2024

See all articles by John M. Abowd

John M. Abowd

Cornell University Department of Economics; Labor Dynamics Institute; Cornell University - School of Industrial and Labor Relations; National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER); CREST; IZA Institute of Labor Economics

David S. Kaplan

Instituto Tecnologico Autonomo de Mexico - Departamento de Economia and Centro de Investigacion Economica

Date Written: May 1999

Abstract

In this article, we focus on how recent research advances can be used to address the following six questions: (1) How much does executive compensation cost the firm? (2) How much is executive compensation worth to the recipient? (3) How well does executive compensation work? (4) What are the effects of executive compensation? (5) How much executive compensation is enough? (6) Could executive compensation be improved? We stress the formal link between executive pay and performance that is provided by stock options and equivalent forms of long term compensation. We compare executive compensation in 12 OECD countries for the period from 1984-1996. There are good reasons why the answers to the first two questions are different. Executive compensation research should be very careful to distinguish the concepts of employer cost and the value to the executive. Agency theory remains the only viable candidate for answering the question about how executive compensation works but the empirical research to date cannot explain very much about the structure of the optimal contract. For this reason, it is also hard to answer the questions about the effects of executive compensation and the adequacy of the amounts of executive compensation, although it is clear that companies can provide both too little and too much contingent compensation, in the context of agency theory. We suggest two fertile areas for research regarding the improvement of executive compensation.

Suggested Citation

Abowd, John and Kaplan, David S., Executive Compensation: Six Questions that Need Answering (May 1999). NBER Working Paper No. w7124, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=165134

John Abowd (Contact Author)

Cornell University Department of Economics ( email )

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HOME PAGE: http://https://blogs.cornell.edu/abowd/

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Cornell University - School of Industrial and Labor Relations ( email )

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David S. Kaplan

Instituto Tecnologico Autonomo de Mexico - Departamento de Economia and Centro de Investigacion Economica ( email )

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Col. Heroes de Padierna
Mexico City, D.F. 10370
Mexico

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