Khaleej Times

If you want to be a really rich CEO, work in these places

- Wei Lu and Anders Melin Income inequality

new york — If your life’s goal is to be a highly-paid chief executive officer, the US is the place. But if your dream is just to be richer than society, South Africa and India are great bets too.

In either case, probably best to avoid Thailand, Poland and China.

A Bloomberg ranking of CEO compensati­on at companies filling benchmark indexes in 25 of the world’s largest economies shows the biggest paychecks — by far — are written in the US. Heads of S&P 500 businesses get pay packages averaging $16.9 million, about 2.6 times more than what their counterpar­ts reap abroad. In secondplac­ed Switzerlan­d, CEOs get 1.6 times the average.

In China, pay is 90 per cent below the average — at least based on disclosure­s by companies in the Shanghai Shenzhen CSI 300 Index. They typically report annual compensati­on of about $640,000. But heads of state-owned companies, for example, enjoy valuable perks including housing and entertainm­ent that sometimes go unmentione­d in filings.

The deck gets shuffled a bit in a second Bloomberg ranking, comparing CEO pay to estimated income generated per person — a rough gauge of what chiefs get relative to the society where their companies are listed. That puts pay for CEOs in South Africa and India ahead of the US.

There are myriad reasons behind the internatio­nal disparitie­s in packages.

One of most important is size. The United States is home to many of the world’s largest publiclytr­aded corporatio­ns.

Cost of living explains some of it, too. It’s much more expensive to live lavishly in North America and Western Europe than in places like Thailand, where CEOs take home roughly $60,000 — less than in every other nation ranked. In other cases, it’s cultural. In Japan, big paychecks are typically taboo because they’re considered a sign of greed. And taxes and regulation­s also matter.

Pay for top US executives has climbed quickly since the 1990s as boards increasing­ly used equity to reward bosses, letting companies take tax deductions for compensati­on linked to performanc­e. Directors at global companies are under pressure from both investors who don’t want to see bosses get rewarded if stocks don’t go up, and executives who compare their paychecks with more highly-paid colleagues overseas. In some places, growing pay levels have stoked the debate over income inequality, triggering a public backlash. Companies in countries including the UK and Spain now hold binding shareholde­r votes on executive pay every third year. The European Union moved in 2013 to limit performanc­ebased awards at banks.

In the US, businesses will at least be required to disclose more, comparing a CEO’s pay with the median worker’s starting in 2017. President-elect Donald Trump has vowed to issue a temporary moratorium on new regulation­s that aren’t “compelled by Congress or public safety”.

Such comparison­s aren’t simple. Bloomberg’s ranking of CEO pay against earnings across society bases income generated per person on gross domestic product per capita, adjusted for purchase-price parity. It’s not a perfect measure: GDP measures just the value of goods and services produced, not how they were distribute­d.

The figures show that CEOs in South Africa and India take home more than the estimated income generated by an average worker — out-earning their American colleagues on a relative basis.

Each country’s compensati­on figure is based on the average CEO pay package for companies in one major stock index, weighted by market capitalisa­tion. The pay, disclosed in public filings, includes any salary, bonuses, value of perquisite­s and noncash pay such as equity awards, deferred-compensati­on programmes and pensions.

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 ?? AFP ?? If you want to be a really rich CEO, the US — especially New York — is the place to be. —
AFP If you want to be a really rich CEO, the US — especially New York — is the place to be. —
 ?? Index tracks average CEO compensati­on (in millions of $) at firms that are members of each country’s primary equity index, weighted by market capitalisa­tion ??
Index tracks average CEO compensati­on (in millions of $) at firms that are members of each country’s primary equity index, weighted by market capitalisa­tion
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