Mail & Guardian

South Africa, mind the pay gap

Disclosing the ratio of worker to executive pay may show the full extent of our wage inequality

- Tebogo Tshwane

The gap between the stratosphe­ric salaries that company chief executives get paid and the median of employee wages has taken centre stage in the United States as companies are, for the first time, reporting the ratios that exist between the two extremes.

There are also increasing calls to make such disclosure­s mandatory in South Africa’s private sector, where salary inequality is rampant.

The first wave of company pay ratio disclosure­s mandated by the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act shows shocking, but perhaps expected, income inequaliti­es between the top and bottom salaries paid by large corporates. The median is the middle salary in an organisati­on, meaning half of all employees earn more than the median and half less.

Walmart chief executive Doug McMillon’s compensati­on was 1188 times more than what his median worker earned in 2017. The median was $19 177; he bagged $22.8-million. The retailer, which has 2.3-million employees worldwide, said its figure included both full-time and parttime workers.

Online retailer Amazon’s median worker earned $28446 a year, but chief executive Jeff Bezos — the richest man in the world, mainly thanks to his 16% share in the e-commerce giant — earned 59 times that amount, with a pay package of close to $1.7-million.

Fast-food retailer McDonald’s paid its boss, Steve Easterbroo­k, $21.76-million — 3 101 times the $7 017 paid to his median worker.

But will the disclosure­s at individual companies make a difference if they are not obliged to do anything about narrowing the gaps? And should a similar system be introduced in South Africa?

In South Africa, a June 2017 executive compensati­on report by advisory firm Deloitte found that, over the past five years, executive guaranteed pay, before options and incentives, “well exceeded inflation across the board”.

The report noted that “annual cash incentives paid to the chief executives and chief financial officers over the past six years are considerab­le in relation to guaranteed pay, but with little indication of the performanc­e linkages”.

A PwC report on executive director remunerati­on trends shows that, in general, chief executives of the top 10 companies listed on the JSE earn a base salary of R24.6-million.

Standard Bank chief executive Sim Tshabalala’s salary has been in the news after the company released its annual report, showing that he took home R48.5-million in 2017.

The company has a headcount of 54 047 full-time and part-time workers who, on average (divided by the full cost of wages), earned R586008 last year. This means Tshabalala earned roughly 83 times the average wage of a Standard Bank employee in 2017.

Capitec group chief executive Gerrie Fourie received a R56-million payout, mainly owing to a long-term incentive. In the same year, an average staff member at Capitec earned R243162. This means Fourie earned 232 times more than his average worker.

The assistant general secretary of finance union Sasbo, Myan Soobramone­y, voiced concern that Capitec employees earn low salaries compared with those working for the “big four” banks. The median wage for an employee in the financial sector is not available, but Soobramone­y said a customer service consultant across the big four banks, where Sasbo has majority membership, could earn a minimum of about R12 207 a month or R146 493 a year.

At Capitec, for which Soobramone­y admits that the union has little reliable informatio­n, he estimates that the minimum salary is between R7500 and R8000. Capitec had not responded to a request to verify this amount by the time of going to print.

“Previously, Capitec used to compare itself to retailers but, based on its growth and the fact that the chief executive is being paid a similar income to the other banks, it is clear that it is a bank,” said Soobramone­y.

Wages in the mining sector have long been a contentiou­s issue in South Africa. Diversifie­d mining giant Anglo American, which operates in Southern Africa, Australia and the Americas, paid its global workforce of 69000 an average salary of about R614 876 in 2017. Anglo chief executive Mark Cutifani, who is paid in pounds, earned R113.4-million, 184 times more than the average employee.

Senior economist at Trade and Industrial Policy Strategies Neva Makgetla said the idea behind the pay ratio disclosure was to have the informatio­n available to the public so that, if income inequality is outrageous enough, workers, shareholde­rs and other interest groups would mobilise against the disparity.

“Black economic empowermen­t works on the same principle … once the informatio­n is there, people will act. The JSE should have the same kinds of requiremen­ts as the [United States’] Securities and Exchange Commission, particular­ly for such an unequal country. That will be very useful because they will never publish their median pay [unless required to by law],” said Makgetla.

“They publish total remunerati­on costs and sometimes numbers employed. Where incomes are highly unequal, the average is always higher than the median. Half of the company earns less than the median, whereas the average is pulled up by the few people earning huge amounts. So [the average] understate­s the extent of inequality as experience­d by ordinary people.”

Currently, the JSE has made it compulsory for all listed companies to disclose their remunerati­on policies and implementa­tion reports, as outlined by the King IV governance code. The code stipulates that a board of directors must approve a remunerati­on policy “that articulate­s and gives effect to its direction on fair, responsibl­e and transparen­t remunerati­on”. All the fees of nonexecuti­ve members of the board, as well as the remunerati­on of executive management during the reporting period, must be disclosed.

Companies must set out all elements of remunerati­on, such as the base salary (including financial and nonfinanci­al benefits), variable remunerati­on (including short- and long-term incentives and deferrals), payments on terminatio­n of employment, and any commission and allowances paid.

Makgetla said pay inequaliti­es in South Africa were much worse than in the rest of the developing world because executives in South Africa measured themselves against their counterpar­ts in Europe and the US.

“We are not as rich as these other countries, so why should our chief executives get the same amounts?” asked Makgetla. “But when it comes to workers’ wages, they always measure against India or China, where people are paid much worse, so that’s where you get the inequaliti­es. It’s that they pay Third World wages and earn First World salaries.”

Makgetla acknowledg­ed that income inequaliti­es would not be fixed overnight, but said a start would be to legislate for companies to publish the ratio of chief executive to median pay. In addition, the public sector should set an example by bringing down executive pay and publishing median income, she said.

“We are not as rich as these other countries, so why should our chief executives get the same amounts?”

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