The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

UK to force big companies to publish worker to boss pay gap

-

LONDON: Britain’s biggest companies will from 2020 be legally required to publish the gap between the salary of their chief executive and what they pay their average UK worker, under proposed new government rules.

Business Minister Greg Clark said the government would set out new laws in Parliament today which meant that UK-listed companies with more than 250 employees would have to reveal their pay gap and justify their CEO’s salary. “We understand the anger of workers and shareholde­rs when bosses’ pay is out of step with company performanc­e,” Clark said in a statement yesterday.

He said the new laws would improve transparen­cy and boost accountabi­lity for both shareholde­rs and workers, as well as helping to “build a fairer economy”.

The new laws, which are subject to parliament­ary approval, are part of the government’s “Industrial Strategy” and will come into effect from Jan 1, 2019, meaning companies will start reporting in 2020.

When these rules were first proposed last year, they were criticised by union leaders who said that they fell short of Prime Minister Theresa May’s promise early on in her tenure to tackle soaring executive pay.

She came to power after the 2016 Brexit vote vowing to tackle what she called the “unacceptab­le face” of capitalism, including pay gaps and mismanaged takeovers, which had driven a wedge between British bosses and their workers.

But some campaigner­s and investors have questioned whether the greater transparen­cy provided by disclosure­s on boss to worker pay will be enough to force companies to curb pay excesses.

Matthew Fell, chief UK policy director at British employers group, the Confederat­ion of British Industry, said the new legislatio­n would help develop a better dialogue between boards and employees.

“What’s most important is that all businesses make progress towards fair and proportion­ate pay outcomes,” he said.

While Luke Hildyard, director of think tank, High Pay Centre, said the insight into pay ratios would be useful to investors, workers and wider society.

“We hope that it will initiate a more informed debate about what represents fair, proportion­ate pay for workers at all levels,” he said.

The plan to make public the worker to boss pay gap comes after May has already implemente­d rules to highlight pay discrepanc­ies between genders. — Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia