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Executive Compensation - Accounting and Economic Issues (Paperback)
Loot Price: R450
Discovery Miles 4 500
You Save: R88
(16%)
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Executive Compensation - Accounting and Economic Issues (Paperback)
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List price R538
Loot Price R450
Discovery Miles 4 500
You Save R88 (16%)
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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The chief executive officer (CEO) of a corporation and her
executive team are responsible for the management of the business
and its continued financial success. This team is almost always
highly compensated and the relative total compensation has
mushroomed over time. Most of the compensation now is designed to
be performance-based; but this structure leads to charges that it
provides executives with incentives to manipulate short term
corporate earnings and stock prices to serve their own compensation
self interests. The book explores this premise and provides
guidance into how such determinations are made. Three key points
are emphasized in this book. First is the role that accounting and
disclosure play in informing the process of determining executive
compensation. Second is the recognition that executive compensation
can affect corporate behavior in a variety of ways; and finally,
there is the acknowledgement that executive compensation cannot be
fully understood without one first becoming familiar with economic
theory and empirical research related to compensation models.
Because the rationale for executive compensation and the way it is
viewed has changed over time, this book adopts a
historical/chronological perspective. This perspective allows the
book to make several observations about the state of executive
compensation and how public disclosures about it have been demanded
and have increased over time. The business culture and
institutional framework for compensation of top executives has
changed dramatically since the 1930s, with important ramifications.
Types and amounts of executive pay have bounced up and down based
on tax laws, regulatory changes and executive self-interest, as
executives find new ways to be paid more. Yet research has shown
that, despite some notable excesses, overall executive compensation
is often more reasonable than recent perceptions would suggest.
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