Houston Chronicle

For CEOs, $11.7 million a year is middle of the pack

- By Stan Choe

NEW YORK — Chief executives at the biggest public companies got an 8.5 percent raise last year, bringing the median pay package for CEOs to $11.7 million. Across the S&P 500, compensati­on for CEOs is often hundreds of times higher than typical workers.

The pay increase matches the bump that CEOs received in 2016, according to salary, stock and other compensati­on data analyzed by Equilar for the Associated Press.

For the first time, the government required companies to show in their annual proxy statements just how much more bosses make than the typical employee. The typical CEO made 164 times the median pay of their employees, according to Equilar’s analysis.

Because the government gave companies wide leeway in how they calculated the median pay of their workers, and because some industries rely heavily on part-time workers, the CEO-to-worker pay ratios are imperfect and make comparison­s difficult. Despite pushback, Congress forced companies to publish the data as a way to shine a spotlight on income inequality.

A debate has already ensued about the significan­ce of this newly released data.

“High pay ratios send a dispiritin­g message to the workforce,” said Liz Shuler, secretary-treasurer of the AFL-CIO, which has been calculatin­g its own tally of CEO-to-worker pay ratios for years. “Companies are asking their workers to do more with less, at the same that CEO pay is on the rise.”

Detractors among business groups, academics and compensati­on consultant­s say the ratio can give a false impression. For example, some companies exclude some of their lower-paid foreign workers, which regulation­s allow. And companies with large part-time workforces will show much greater disparity between the CEO’s pay and median pay.

At Yum Brands, CEO Greg Creed’s pay of $12.3 million was 1,358 times higher than the company median of $9,111. The employee who earned that amount, on an annualized basis, was a part-time employee at a Taco Bell restaurant.

So far, shareholde­rs seem OK with the pay packages for CEOs. At Yum Brands, more than 95 percent of shareholde­rs approved their CEOs’ pay for last year. Likely buoying that support was the 31.1 percent return for Yum Brands stock.

Across the S&P 500, such votes on executive compensati­on passed with similar approval ratings in 2016 and 2017, at 95 percent, according to the data compiled by Equilar. The boards of directors who set CEO pay, meanwhile, say they are tying more of their executives’ compensati­on to how the company is performing, and they need to pay the going rate to keep talented executives.

The highest-paid CEO in Equilar’s analysis was Hock Tan of Broadcom, who made $103.2 million. The vast majority of Tan’s compensati­on came in the form of a stock grant, valued at $98.3 million.

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