薪酬委员会成员的年龄对CEO薪酬有影响吗?

Yiwei Li, M. Clements, Carol Padgett, Xiu‐Ye Zhang
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摘要

我们研究了薪酬委员会(CC)成员的年龄对CEO薪酬的影响。社会学理论认为,年龄是影响行为的重要人口因素。我们认为,监督强度随着年龄的增长而增加,因为年长的董事更有可能履行自己的受托责任。利用2002年至2017年富时350指数公司的数据,我们发现CC成员的年龄与CEO薪酬水平呈负相关,但在控制了风险厌恶态度、董事会监督经验、公司知识以及其他公司和CEO特征后,与薪酬绩效敏感性呈正相关。使用两阶段最小二乘法和高维固定效应模型,对年龄和薪酬的替代测量方法,这种关系仍然是稳健的。我们发现,年龄效应对道德因素的影响非常敏感,而且对于那些最需要严格监管的公司来说,年龄效应最强。这表明,年龄的作用是通过年长的董事更努力地履行自己的职责来实现的。我们进一步表明,我们的发现不太可能受到董事声誉效应的驱动,即使我们控制了董事董事文化遗传属性的多个维度,董事董事年龄与CEO薪酬之间的关系仍然存在。尽管关于人口统计学特征对公司治理影响的文献很多,但本研究是第一个关于CC成员年龄监测效应的研究。对人口统计学特征影响的文献研究有所贡献。在控制了公司的经济和公司治理变量之后,它还通过确定人口因素年龄作为CEO薪酬的决定因素,为CEO薪酬的文献做出了贡献。本研究强调了人口因素在解释CEO薪酬签约过程监测中的作用,并为最近的监管变化提供了及时的证据。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Does the Age of Compensation Committee Members Matter for CEO Compensation?
We examine the impact of the age of compensation committee (CC) members on CEO compensation. Sociological theory suggests that age is a significant demographic factor influencing behavior. We argue that monitoring intensity increases with age because older directors are more likely to commit to their fiduciary duties.Using FTSE 350 firms for the period 2002 to 2017, we find that CC members' age is negatively associated with the level of CEO pay but positively associated with pay–performance sensitivity after controlling for risk aversion attitude, experience in board monitoring, knowledge of the firm, and other firm and CEO characteristics. The relationships remain robust to alternative measures for age and compensation, using two‐stage least squares and high‐dimensional fixed effects models. Consistent with the view that older individuals tend to hold higher ethical standards and concomitant closer monitoring, we find that age effects are sensitive to the influence of ethical factors and are strongest for those firms for which intense monitoring is most needed. This suggests that age operates via older directors carrying out their roles more assiduously. We further show that our findings are less likely to be driven by director reputational effects, and the relationship between CC member age and CEO compensation persists even when we control for multiple dimensions of culturally inherited attributes of the CC members.Despite the large literature on the influence of demographic characteristics on corporate governance, this study is the first on the monitoring effect of CC members' age. It contributes to the literature on the influence of demographic characteristic. It also contributes to the literature on CEO compensation by identifying a demographic factor—age—as a determinant of CEO pay, after controlling for the economic and corporate governance variables of the firm.This study highlights the role of demographic factors in explaining the monitoring of the CEO compensation contracting process and provides timely evidence on the recent regulatory changes.
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