Monday, 4 January 2010

Australia: Productivity Commission report on executive remuneration released

The Productivity Commission report on executive remuneration was released today: see here (pdf - 2.6MB). The report rejects the introduction of a cap on executive pay and a binding shareholder vote on remuneration. Instead it contains 17 recommendations designed to strengthen the corporate governance framework, including: 
  • All ASX300 companies should have a remuneration committee, comprising solely of non-executive directors (the majority of whom should be independent).
  • The remuneration report should contain a summary statement, in plain English, of the company's remuneration policies.
  • Proxy holders should be required, except in exceptional circumstances, to cast all of their directed proxies on remuneration reports and any resolutions related to those reports.
  • Institutional investors, particularly superannuation funds, should disclose, at least on an annual basis, how they have voted on remuneration reports and other remuneration-related issues.
  • Where a company’s remuneration report receives a ‘no’ vote of 25 per cent or more of eligible votes cast at an AGM, the board should be required to explain in its subsequent report how shareholder concerns were addressed and, if they have not been, the reasons why; where the subsequent remuneration report receives a 'no' vote of 25 per cent or more of eligible votes cast at the next AGM, a resolution should be put that the elected directors who signed the directors’ report for that meeting stand for re-election at an extraordinary general meeting.

No comments: