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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: Britain
Britain: New "fat cats" row over £1 million
corporate payoffs
By Neil Hodge
26 January 2002
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Golden handshakes of more than £1 million ($1.4m) were
paid to a record 14 senior executives in the UK last year. More
than twice the number in any previous year, the payoffs have triggered
a new row over the sums that executive fat cats are
being awarded, sometimes despite poor company performance.
In the year ending September 2001, a total of 75 directors
left their posts with six- or seven-figure sums worth an average
£703,618 ($1m). Top of the list was a £9.1 million
($13m) retirement gift to Klaus Esser, after Vodafone took over
German telecoms group Mannesmann. The size of the award has prompted
an inquiry by the Dusseldorf state prosecutor to see if the payment
influenced the outcome of the takeover negotiations.
In second place was Jim Mueller, who presided over 14,000 job
cuts (or to put it in euphemistic business jargon, rationalised
the workforce) when a City merger created Invensys, the
troubled automation group. He left his post with a £3.2
million ($4.5m) handshake while pushing for the company to relocate
manufacturing capacity to low cost markets such as
Mexico, China and Malaysia in a drive to boost profits.
Others include executives who worked for some of the biggest
corporate names in the UK, including Barclays Bank, the Alliance
& Leicester building society, Reuters news agency and the
Sainsburys supermarket chain.
Many of the payments include compensation for notice periods
and tax-free lump sums channelled into pension schemes. The payoff
given to former Railtrack chief Gerald Corbett is listed at £444,000,
($632,000) yet a pension deal pushed him into the millionaire
league when he was ousted following the Hatfield train disaster
two years ago, which killed four people and injured dozens more.
The union-funded Labour Research Department (LRD), which compiled
the figures, said: Top executives who have been sacked,
have left the company over boardroom disagreements or by mutual
consent, or simply retired, often get phenomenally generous payoffs
that can amount to six or even seven figures.
The total of 14 instant corporate millionaires last year is
the highest since the LRD started routinely analysing company
accounts in 1994, and is more than double the previous recordsix
casesin 1998. Calls are being made for Trade and Industry
Secretary Patricia Hewitt to use the study as ammunition to give
shareholders a right to an annual vote on directors pay
packages from 2003.
The legal minimum wage in Britain is just £4.10 per hour
($6). At this rate, it would take 171,614 hours, or over 19 years
working 24 hours a day without a break to earn the average UK
corporate payoff.
Roger Lyons, Trades Union Congress spokesman on corporate governance,
said the size of boardroom payouts revealed in the report were,
further evidence, if any was needed, of corporate greed
running out of control.
Even incompetents managed to depart their posts with
a kings ransom after destroying the jobs of thousands of
workers in companies left in tatters, Lyons said.
It is not difficult to find cases where directors were rewarded
handsomely despite company failure. Last September, struggling
telecoms company Marconiwhich has seen its share value decimated
and its workforce massively cut during the past 12 monthsawarded
its CEO Lord Simpson £300,000 ($427,000) on leaving the
company. The package was originally set at £3.5 million
($5m) until shareholders protested. Sir Peter Bonfield was also
fortunate enough to get a bonus of £2.9 million ($4.1m)
after landing British Telecom into £30 billion ($43bn) of
debt through buying commercially dubious third-generation
mobile phone licences.
But a spokesman for the Confederation of British Industry (CBI),
the largest business executive lobby group in the UK, defended
boardroom decisions to pay executives such large leaving packages.
These are legal commitments entered into when a contract
is signed and honoured if it is ended in particular circumstances.
They are open to shareholder scrutiny, with full details given
in a companys annual report. We need to understand that
contracts have to allow for the fact that companies have to compete
for executive talent in a global market place, he said.
Yet this is contrary to the recommendations of the CBI-backed
Greenbury committeedrawn up in the mid-nineties to address
corporate best practice and directors paywhich said
that the broad aim of such golden handshakes should be to avoid
rewarding poor performance.
In total, 17 of the companies listed made big payments to more
than one director during the 12 months covered by the report.
Leading the field was mobile phone company Vodafone, which shelled
out over £10 million ($14) to two of its departing executives,
with pharmaceuticals giant GlaxoSmithKline coming in at second
place, awarding three of its executives with £1 million-plus
golden handshakes. Despite its recent financial troubles, retail
group Marks & Spencer also rewarded three of its departing
executives handsomely with a combined payout of £1,653,000
($2.4m).
Yet such sums are chickenfeed compared to the remuneration
packages that top executives are being paid in the US. In 2000,
Jack Welch, the former CEO of the company with the largest stock
market valuation General Electric, earned $231,149,232. This figure
does not include unexercised stock options totalling $341,518,062
from previous years. To put this figure into context, Welchs
package for 2000 would support 21,578 minimum wage earners in
America for a full year. Alternatively, it would take until 23579
AD on minimum wages to equal Welchs pay compensation just
for that one year.
Corporate big spenders
The following table lists corporations in the UK awarding £100,000
or more to at least two executives leaving the company during
2001
|
Company |
Total payout |
|
Vodafone |
£10,272,000 |
|
GlaxoSmithKline |
£3,515,000 |
|
Arcadia |
£2,732,000 |
|
BG Group |
£1,873,898 |
|
Celltech |
£1,771,828 |
|
Marks & Spencer |
£1,653,000 |
|
British Telecom |
£1,385,000 |
|
Trinity Mirror |
£1,369,000 |
|
Hays |
£954,000 |
|
Railtrack |
£594,000 |
|
Hornby |
£498,418 |
|
Kelda |
£479,000 |
|
United Business Media |
£452,705 |
|
Thistle Hotels |
£367,000 |
|
Friends Provident |
£357,000 |
|
Jarvis Porter |
£249,000 |
|
Scottish & Southern Energy |
£244,000 |
|
Grand total paid out |
£28,766,849 |
|
Average payout per executive |
£719,171 |
See Also:
Republican vice-presidential
nominee gets $20 million payoff from US oil company
[18 August 2000]
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