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Keyword: paycaps

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  • France to cap executive pay at €450,000 ($564,000) for state firms

    06/13/2012 9:09:10 AM PDT · by Olog-hai · 20 replies
    RTÉ News ^ | Updated: 14:42, Wednesday, 13 June 2012
    France's finance minister today announced plans to limit executive pay at state-owned companies to €450,000 (US$564,000) a year. He called the measure a matter of justice and morality.The pay cap delivers on a campaign-trail promise by France's new Socialist President François Hollande, who sought to tap widespread public anger over executive salary packages. It will take effect in 2012 or 2013 depending on the company, Finance Minister Pierre Moscovici said. "Earning €450,000 a year doesn't seem to me a deterrent if we want to have quality men and women at the head of our companies," Moscovici told a press conference...
  • Capitalism Should Return to Its Roots

    02/07/2009 6:01:19 AM PST · by Brilliant · 46 replies · 756+ views
    WSJ ^ | FEBRUARY 7, 2009 | CARL C. ICAHN
    President Barack Obama's plan to limit executive pay to $500,000 a year -- plus restricted stock -- for institutions that get government funding is understandable. Still, salary caps are only a stopgap measure that fails to address the root of the problem. The real problem is that many corporate managements operate with impunity -- with little oversight by, or accountability to, shareholders. Instead of operating as aggressive watchdogs over management and corporate assets, many boards act more like lapdogs. Despite the fact that managements, albeit with some exceptions, have done an extremely poor job, they are often lavishly rewarded regardless...
  • . . . They (executive pay caps) Violate Good Sense and the Constitution

    02/06/2009 5:12:14 AM PST · by Zakeet · 28 replies · 752+ views
    Wall Street Journal ^ | February 6, 2009 | Andrew P. Napolitano
    The executive compensation caps that President Barack Obama and Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner summarily announced this week violate both the Constitution and Economics 101. I have argued on this page that the Troubled Asset Relief Program for the banks is itself inherently and profoundly unconstitutional for several reasons. It promotes only short-term private benefit, rather than the general welfare as the Constitution commands of all federal spending. It evades the constitutional requirement of equal protection by saving some businesses and letting others that are similarly situated simply expire. And it delegates to the secretary of the Treasury the power to...