The
Last Word |
May 27, 2012 4:53 am |
A ‘shareholders’ spring’ is not enough
By John Plender
The “shareholder spring” revolt over boardroom pay is a
welcome, if overdue, assertion of the rights of ownership. Yet it needs to
go a great deal further if it is to address those aspects of executive pay
that are most economically damaging. These relate to the prevailing bonus
culture and its impact on the investment and savings behaviour of the
corporate sector in the US and UK.
A striking feature of corporate balance sheets on which I have commented
before is the build up of corporate savings in the English-speaking
countries. This reflects, first, a secular rise in profit margins that
defies the economic cycle. In the US, for example, profit margins are now at
record high levels despite the economy being relatively weak, with spare
capacity and a high rate of unemployment. The data in the UK are less clear
cut, but the trend appears broadly similar.
Then, in both countries, there is a secular decline in business investment,
which is not apparent in either France or Germany. Hence the tendency to
towards surplus savings in the quoted corporate sector, which traditionally
used to be a net borrower, leaving it to households to do the bulk of the
saving.
In the case of the UK, Andrew Smithers of Smithers & Co points out that the
fall in the investment ratio might partly be explained by a declining return
on capital in manufacturing. He nonetheless provides compelling evidence
that falling business investment results primarily from the incentives
embedded in the Anglo-American bonus culture.*
Consider the most popular metrics employed in bonus schemes. Earnings per
share is a manipulable target which is easy to pump up in the short term at
longer-term cost to the business. Return on equity can be increased in the
short term by taking on more leverage. Yet this comes at the cost of
weakening the balance sheet and potential destruction of economic value –
witness the disastrous bonus-driven behaviour in the banking sector. Total
shareholder return for a majority of companies will be more a reflection of
movements in the stock market generally than the performance of the company.
Only those in a state of higher innocence would fail to see the potential
impact of these metrics on behaviour. All of them have the disadvantage that
they encourage executives to resist the cuts in profit margins that might
result in the short term from increasing investment in fixed assets. The
choice between steering cash flow towards investment or paying it out in
dividends and share buybacks thus incorporates a clear bias in favour of
distribution. In poorly designed bonus schemes the buybacks are a means of
boosting earnings per share because they shrink the number of shares by
which earnings have to be divided. The outcome is that quoted companies in
the US and UK will inevitably lose market share to foreign and unquoted
competitors.
There are wider ramifications. The rise in profit margins means a fall in
the labour share of output. This is great for the rich but not for the poor,
who own no shares. At the same time the bonus culture has increased the
income of the highly paid relative to the rest. This contributes to income
inequality – another syndrome that has been particularly extreme in the
English-speaking countries and which led to the Occupy Wall Street movement,
with its slogan “we are the 99 per cent”.
A more fundamental economic point made by Mr Smithers is that the
accumulation of business savings means that fiscal deficits will not fall as
readily in a cyclical economic recovery as they have in the past, not least
because large fiscal deficits will be necessary to prevent a fall back into
recession. If this is ignored in economic policy, he adds, a return to
recession is likely either because attempts to rein in fiscal deficits will
be too fast, or because their continued high level will cause inflationary
expectations to rise. It should be clear from this that policy initiatives
to cap bonuses and make say-on-pay votes mandatory do not go far enough to
prevent the competitive disadvantages that arise from the bonus culture. The
need is for a more radical re-examination of where or even whether bonuses
are necessary and at the very least a shift back towards cash as the
predominant component of executive pay. That, in itself, would strike a blow
for simplicity in a world where executive pay has become absurdly
over-complicated.
Yet policy makers should tread with care. In the Clinton administration’s
first term in the early 1990s the Internal Revenue Code was changed so that
executive pay ceased to be tax allowable over $1m a year.
There followed an explosion in the use of stock options and the entrenchment
of the bonus culture, which then spread to the rest of the English-speaking
world.
The law of unintended consequences lurks just around the corner.
* ‘The Change in Corporate Behaviour’, Report No. 401
©
The Financial Times Ltd 2012 |
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