Los Angeles Times

Top CEO- worker pay gap? 1,951 to 1, study says

- By Samantha Masunaga samantha. masunaga @ latimes. com Twitter: @ smasunaga

Discovery Communicat­ions topped a list of companies with the largest pay difference between their chief executives and median workers, according to a new study by jobs and recruiting company Glassdoor.

The ratio between CEO David M. Zaslav’s pay and the median pay of Discovery workers is 1,951 to 1, according to the study. In 2014, Zaslav made $ 156 million, while median pay was $ 80,000, Glassdoor reported.

Discovery Communicat­ions, which owns popular U. S. cable channels including Discovery Network, TLC and Animal Planet, did not respond immediatel­y to a request for comment.

Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc. came in second, with a pay ratio of 1,522 to 1, and CVS Health was third with a ratio of 1,192 to 1, according to the study.

In a statement, CVS spokesman Michael DeAngelis said compensati­on for its CEO and other executives is “in line” with industry standards and “closely ref lects” the company’s financial performanc­e and success. Chipotle didn’t respond to a request for comment.

Glassdoor called the study a “sneak preview” into the CEO pay ratio disclosure rule approved this month by the Securities and Exchange Commission. The new rule requires the nation’s 4,000 publicly traded companies to disclose the ratio of the CEO’s annual total compensati­on to the median compensati­on of the company’s employees.

The rule applies to reporting for financial statements for 2017 and later, meaning the first official glimpse of the numbers will come in spring 2018.

Although Glassdoor is not the first to publish estimated CEO pay ratios, the company said it has collected “thousands” of salary reports over the years from employees to encourage pay transparen­cy in the workplace, giving it a “unique window into worker pay.”

It’s unclear whether the various studies on CEO pay have inf luenced public or shareholde­r opinion, experts say. But the ratio alone may not say everything about the pay difference, said Robert Jackson Jr., a professor at Columbia Law School.

Investors should also look at the compensati­on ratio in relation to other informatio­n, such as performanc­e disclosure­s, he said.

“Most Americans don’t mind so much when CEOs make a lot of money if they perform,” Jackson said. “What bothers them is if they get paid when they fail, and this ratio alone doesn’t tell you anything about that.”

Glassdoor’s informatio­n is not exactly what the SEC will require. While Glassdoor used SEC proxy statement filings to determine CEO compensati­on informatio­n, which is publicly disclosed, the company relied on its employee surveys to calculate total compensati­on for employees. Only companies with 30 or more Glassdoor employee surveys were included on the list.

Workers often underrepor­t bonuses and stock options in surveys because many do not know or do not remember their nonsalary compensati­on, Glassdoor said. This means total pay is probably underrepor­ted, which can drive the pay ratio up. The salary reports also might not represent the full range of jobs at the company, Glassdoor said. The company based its analysis on 441 large, publicly traded companies listed in the Standard & Poor’s 500 index.

 ?? Scott Olson Getty I mages ?? DISCOVERY’S David Zaslav made $ 156 million last year; median pay was $ 80,000, Glassdoor says.
Scott Olson Getty I mages DISCOVERY’S David Zaslav made $ 156 million last year; median pay was $ 80,000, Glassdoor says.

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