Strong Senate approval on Wednesday night, October 1, gave new momentum to a
$700 billion rescue of financial markets that includes curbs on executive pay at
financial firms that participate in the program.
The package is largely the same as the one that failed in the House earlier
in the week. But the Senate added several tax measures, a higher limit on
deposit insurance and legislation that would require cost, and coverage parity
between mental health and medical benefits in insurance plans that offer both.
The underlying bill authorizes the federal purchase of troubled
mortgage-based assets from banks and other financial institutions to avert a
systemic Wall Street failure. Proponents of the legislation, including business
groups that are fiercely lobbying Capitol Hill, warn that a credit freeze
already is limiting loans for consumers, students and businesses.
After nearly two weeks of bipartisan talks and two major setbacks, senators
hailed their chamber’s 74-25 vote as a breakthrough. Both presidential
candidates—Sens. John McCain, R-Arizona, and Barack Obama, D-Illinois—
supported the bill.
“This vote tonight is the turning point,” said Sen. Max Baucus, D-Montana and
chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, on Monday at a press conference after
the vote.
Now the bill returns to an uncertain fate in the House, where it fell 228-205
on Monday, September 29. A vote on the Senate-approved version could come
Friday.
“Inaction is not an option,” said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid,
D-Nevada. “It’s my expectation that the House of Representatives will follow
suit.”
Even if the House tweaks the bill further, it is unlikely to change the
carefully negotiated executive compensation provisions.
Under the bill, a company that sells assets directly to the government would
be barred from giving golden parachute severance packages to departing
executives and would be compelled to “exclude incentives for executive officers
… to take unnecessary and excessive risks.” It also would have to recover bonus
or incentive compensation paid to a senior executive based on performance
measures that later proved inaccurate.
If a firm sells more than $300 million in assets to the government at an
auction, it would be prohibited from offering golden parachutes to newly hired
senior executives. The company would be subject to a 20 percent excise tax on
golden parachute payments to fired executives. Tax deductions would be limited
for compensation above $500,000.
Initially, the Bush administration resisted the executive compensation
provisions. But the business community is now onboard in a move that has helped
build bipartisan support for the bill.
“It’s not unreasonable for the government to have control and oversight on
compensation for companies that sell assets to the government,” said Tom Lehner,
policy director at the Business Roundtable, a Washington group representing CEOs
of big companies.
It won’t be clear how many of the executive compensation restrictions will
work until the Treasury Department writes corresponding regulations.
Charles Tharp, executive vice president for policy at the Center on Executive
Compensation in Washington, is concerned that amorphous definitions could hamper
corporations.
“I don’t know how you comply with vague statements like ‘inappropriate’ or
‘excessive risk,’ ” Tharp said. “I don’t know what excessive risk is. It really
ties the hands of the board.”
He also warned that “there needs to be more thought on how to implement” the
golden parachute limits. Those rules could prevent weak firms from finding new
leaders.
“Not being able to offer severance will make it harder to recruit and retain
people,” Tharp said. “Severance gives someone an incentive to join a troubled
company and turn it around.”
Sen. Christopher Dodd, D-Connecticut and chairman of the Senate Banking
Committee, downplayed such worries about the bill. He pointed out that the
executive compensation rules are calibrated based on how companies participate
in the rescue.
“I don’t think this is any great restraint,” Dodd said in an interview after
the Senate vote. “Besides, these firms won’t be doing much hiring given the
shape they’re in.”
Even though it’s not yet law, the financial rescue measure may add more
urgency to pay considerations in corporate America.
“Compensation committees already have started to focus on reducing severance
multiples and change in control payments over the past year,” said Steven
Seelig, executive compensation counsel at Watson Wyatt in Arlington,
Virginia.
–Mark Schoeff Jr.
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