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Do Compensation Consultants Drive Up CEO Pay? Evidence from UK Public Firms
Author(s) -
Conyon Martin J.,
Hass Lars Helge,
Peck Simon I.,
Sadler Graham V.,
Zhang Zhifang
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
british journal of management
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.407
H-Index - 108
eISSN - 1467-8551
pISSN - 1045-3172
DOI - 10.1111/1467-8551.12307
Subject(s) - compensation (psychology) , executive compensation , matching (statistics) , pay for performance , accounting , business , sample (material) , order (exchange) , power (physics) , empirical evidence , principal–agent problem , economics , finance , microeconomics , incentive , corporate governance , psychology , philosophy , statistics , chemistry , physics , mathematics , chromatography , quantum mechanics , epistemology , psychoanalysis
Do compensation consultants drive up CEO pay for the benefit of managers, or do they design pay packages to benefit firm owners? Using a large sample of UK firms from the FTSE All‐Share Index over the 2003–2011 period, we show a positive correlation between the presence of compensation consultants and CEO pay. Importantly, isolating this effect is somewhat dependent on the endogenous selection of consultants and the statistical modelling strategy deployed. We find evidence that compensation consultants improve CEO compensation design when their expertise is of greater importance (e.g. during the post‐financial crisis period, or for firms that have particularly weak compensation policies). In addition, our findings show that compensation consultants increase CEO pay–performance sensitivity. The balance of evidence supports optimal contracting theory more than managerial power theory, but the authors caution the limits to this verification. We are careful to note that the more compelling evidence for the positive effect of pay consultants on CEOs is based on advanced methods (such as propensity score matching and difference‐in‐differences), and that more standard approaches (such as OLS and fixed effects) are unlikely to reveal the same level of causality of consultants on CEO pay.