- For the first time ever, listed companies will
legally be required to annually publish and justify pay
difference between chief executives and their staff
- the directors of all large companies will also have
to set out how they are acting in the interests of
employees and shareholders
- reporting is part of the government’s
modern Industrial
Strategy which is helping ensure the UK
remains a world-leading place to invest and do
business.
Big firms will have to justify their chief executives’
salaries and reveal the gap to their average UK worker,
under new laws to be laid in Parliament tomorrow
(Monday 11 June).
It means that for the first time, UK listed companies
with more than 250 UK employees will have to disclose
and explain this difference - known as ‘pay ratios’ -
every year.
This follows concerns that some chief executives have
been receiving salaries that are out-of-step with
company performance.
These new regulations are part of a package of reforms
which will hold big businesses to account for the
salaries they pay, while giving employees a greater
voice in the boardroom.
Business Secretary said:
One of Britain’s biggest assets in competing in the
global economy is our deserved reputation for being a
dependable and confident place in which to do
business.
Most of the UK’s largest companies get their business
practices right but we understand the anger of
workers and shareholders when bosses’ pay is out of
step with company performance.
Requiring large companies to publish their pay gaps
will build on that reputation by improving
transparency and boosting accountability at the
highest levels, while helping build a fairer economy
that works for everyone.
The new regulations form a core part of the
government’s modern Industrial Strategy which aims to
build on the UK’s strong reputation and make sure our
largest companies are more transparent and accountable
to their employees and shareholders.
In addition to the reporting of pay ratios, the news
laws will also:
- require all large companies to report on how their
directors take employee and other stakeholder interests
into account
- require large private companies to report on their
responsible business arrangements
- require listed companies to show what effect an
increase in share prices will have on executive pay to
inform shareholders when voting on long-term incentive
plans
Responding to the government’s new corporate governance
laws, the chief executive of the Investment Association
(IA) Chris
Cummings said:
The UK has a global reputation as a leader in
corporate governance and we welcome today’s package
of reforms as they focus on the long-term interest of
all company stakeholders, including shareholders and
employees.
Investors are demanding greater director
accountability and transparency on executive
remuneration. Pay ratios will shine a spotlight on
what executives are being paid compared with their
workforce, and investors will expect Boards to
articulate why the ratio is right for the company and
how directors are fulfilling their duties.
Through the IA’s Public Register
we are seeing investors hold business to account.
The IA wants to
ensure UK listed companies are run in a way that
delivers long-term returns for savers and pensioners.
Director of the High Pay Centre Luke Hildyard said:
Pay ratios provide an insight into the culture and
employment practices of major companies that is
useful to investors, workers and wider society alike.
This is a welcome move that will greatly improve
public understanding of the pay gap between those at
the top and low and middle-income earners.
We hope that it will initiate a more informed debate
about what represents fair, proportionate pay for
workers at all levels.
Chief UK Policy Director of the Confederation of
British Industry (CBI) Matthew
Fell said:
The CBI is
clear that high pay is only ever justified by
outstanding performance. High pay for mediocre or
poor performance is unacceptable.
This legislation can help to develop a better
dialogue between boards and employees about the goals
and aspirations of their business, and how pay is
determined to achieve this shared vision.
Ratio comparisons between sectors and firms will be
as meaningless as comparing apples and oranges.
What’s most important is that all businesses make
progress towards fair and proportionate pay outcomes.
UK Government Minister said:
It only takes poor behaviour from a small number of
companies to damage the public’s trust in big
business. These new laws will ensure that differences
in salary within large companies across Scotland and
the whole of the UK - and the reasons for the
variations - will be there for all to see.
Improving transparency and accountability in this
way, plus other initiatives such as giving employees
a voice in the boardroom, will help create a more
equal and fair society while ensuring that the UK
remains a world-leading place to invest and do
business.
The new laws follow last year’s corporate governance
reforms which sought to increase boardroom
accountability.
Subject to Parliamentary approval, the regulations will
come into effect from 1 January 2019 meaning that
companies will start reporting their pay ratios in
2020.
The government has already:
- supported the Investment Association’s world-first
public register of FTSE-listed companies where more
than one fifth of shareholders have opposed resolutions
on executive pay packages, directors’ re-appointments
and other issues
- appointed James Wates to lead a coalition of
industry and wider society bodies in drawing up the
UK’s first-ever set of corporate governance principles
for large private companies
- launched research into the use of share buyback
schemes to see if they are being used to artificially
inflate executive pay
- asked the Financial Reporting Council (FRC) to
revise its Corporate Governance Code to strengthen the
voice of employees and other stakeholders in the
boardroom
- proposed new reforms to ensure that directors
dissolving companies to dodge debts and avoid facing
accusations of misconduct will face investigation for
the first time.
, Shadow
Business, Industrial Strategy and Energy
Secretary, responding to Government plans to
tackle the pay gap between bosses and workers, said:
“The Tories have missed the mark again, reannouncing
half-baked, rehashed policies that do nothing to tackle
the entrenched inequality that's crippling our society.
“This won't end staggering pay disparity or help
hard-up workers at the bottom of the chain. and her
Government are too weak and unwilling to take on big
bosses and act in favour of ordinary workers.
“Labour will stand up to the corporate elite by making
businesses act in the best interest of their employees
and roll out maximum pay ratios in public sector
companies and contracts.”
Ends
Notes to editors:
· The manifesto committed
to rolling out maximum pay ratios of 20:1 in the public
sector and in companies bidding for public contracts.
· The has announced a
review into corporate governance.