Associate Professor Xiaoxia Peng’s research accepted for publication by the “Journal of Management Accounting Research”
Author: Xiaoxia Peng
Associate Professor, H. James Griffs-FIA Fellowship
Department: School of Accounting
Co-Author(s): Mary Ellen Carter, Luann J. Lynch
Title: COVID-19-Motivated Changes to Executive Compensation
Journal: Journal of Management Accounting Research
Summary:
We provide new insights into companies’ decisions to cut CEO pay during theCOVID-19 pandemic by comparing 482 firms announcing CEO salary cuts with those that do not. We find that salary cuts are more prevalent in firms with poor pre-pandemic performance, lower cash holdings, employee layoffs, and better governance. Shareholders appear to view these cuts favorably in firms with higher CEO pay ratios and those that are the first among their peer firms to make such an announcement. These findings suggest that pay cuts reflect efforts to adjust pay efficiently in response to changes in contracting environments and to lend legitimacy to other difficult decisions that firms face, alongside governance characteristics. We also find that CEO salary cuts coincide with well-timed equity grants that appreciate in value more than those in noncutting firms and with a shift away from earnings-based metrics in performance-based incentive plans.