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Smith
School's Finance Chair Helps
Stir Debate On Executive
Compensation
Lemma Senbet, Holder of the
William E. Mayer Chair in
Finance at the Robert H. Smith
School of Business, is among
more than 30 members of the
influential Financial Economists
Roundtable (http://www.luc.edu/orgs/finroundtable/)
(FER) signing on to a position
paper addressing executive
compensation issues. The
statement, released November 24,
calls for the repeal of a
federal tax law that limits
business tax breaks for
compensation over $1 million.
Senbet and other FER members
argue that the law encourages
the use of stock options, which
do not fall under the cap.
Senbet is quoted in an
article in The Wall Street
Journal, which says the
statement "seems sure to stir
debate." The group's proposals
"will potentially mitigate the
factors that led to the
corporate scandals," Senbet told
the Journal.
In July, Senbet led FER's
discussion on executive
compensation issues, and then
later he helped draft the final
statement. In addition to the
tax law repeal, FER calls for
further disclosure of material
changes in compensation,
requiring a compensation expert
on corporate boards, and the
expensing of stock options.
FER is a group of senior
financial economists, who have
made significant contributions
to the finance literature and
seek to apply their knowledge to
current policy debates. Its
major objective is to create a
forum for intellectual
interaction that promotes
in-depth analyses of current
policy issues in order to raise
the level of public and private
policy debate and improve the
quality of policy decision. The
following statement on "The
Controversy Over Executive
Compensation" is the result of a
discussion at FER's annual
meeting on July 13-14, 2003.
Read the full statement on "The
Controversy Over Executive
Compensation"
Related
articles:
The Washington Times,
Nov. 24, 2003
"Economists want fed exec pay
law repealed."
St. Louis Post Dispatch,
Nov. 28, 2003
"Tax law misses the mark on
executive pay." |